Fanchon walked into the house to see
her uncle Dodier. When she was gone, the countenance
of La Corriveau put on a dark and terrible expression.
Her black eyes looked downwards, seeming to penetrate
the very earth, and to reflect in their glittering
orbits the fires of the underworld.
She stood for a few moments, buried
in deep thought, with her arms tightly folded across
her breast. Her fingers moved nervously, as they
kept time with the quick motions of her foot, which
beat the ground.
“It is for death, and no lost
jewels, that girl sends for me!” muttered La
Corriveau through her teeth, which flashed white and
cruel between her thin lips. “She has a
rival in her love for the Intendant, and she will
lovingly, by my help, feed her with the manna of St.
Nicholas! Angelique des Meloises has boldness,
craft, and falseness for twenty women, and can keep
secrets like a nun. She is rich and ambitious,
and would poison half the world rather than miss the
thing she sets her mind on. She is a girl after
my own heart, and worth the risk I run with her.
Her riches would be endless should she succeed in her
designs; and with her in my power, nothing she has
would henceforth be her own, but mine!
mine! Besides,” added La Corriveau, her
thoughts flashing back to the fate which had overtaken
her progenitors, Exili and La Voisin, “I
may need help myself, some day, to plead with the Intendant
on my own account, who knows?”
A strange thrill ran through the veins
of La Corriveau, but she instantly threw it off.
“I know what she wants,” added she.
“I will take it with me. I am safe in trusting
her with the secret of Beatrice Spara. That girl
is worthy of it as Brinvilliers herself.”
La Corriveau entered her own apartment.
She locked the door behind her, drew a bunch of keys
from her bosom, and turned towards a cabinet of singular
shape and Italian workmanship which stood in a corner
of the apartment. It was an antique piece of
furniture, made of some dark oriental wood, carved
over with fantastic figures from Etruscan designs
by the cunning hand of an old Italian workman, who
knew well how to make secret drawers and invisible
concealments for things dangerous and forbidden.
It had once belonged to Antonio Exili,
who had caused it to be made, ostensibly for the safe-keeping
of his cabalistic formulas and alchemic preparations,
when searching for the philosopher’s stone and
the elixir of life, really for the concealment of
the subtle drugs out of which his alembics distilled
the aqua tofana and his crucibles prepared the
poudre de succession.
In the most secret place of all were
deposited, ready for use, a few vials of the crystal
liquid, every single drop of which contained the life
of a man, and which, administered in due proportion
of time and measure, killed and left no sign, numbering
its victim’s days, hours, and minutes, exactly
according to the will and malignity of his destroyer.
La Corriveau took out the vials, and
placed them carefully in a casket of ebony not larger
than a woman’s hand. In it was a number
of small flaskets, each filled with pills like grains
of mustard-seed, the essence and quintessence of various
poisons, that put on the appearance of natural diseases,
and which, mixed in due proportion with the aqua tofana,
covered the foulest murders with the lawful ensigns
of the angel of death.
In that box of ebony was the sublimated
dust of deadly nightshade, which kindles the red fires
of fever and rots the roots of the tongue. There
was the fetid powder of stramonium, that grips the
lungs like an asthma; and quinia, that shakes its
victims like the cold hand of the miasma of the Pontine
marshes. The essence of poppies, ten times sublimated,
a few grains of which bring on the stupor of apoplexy;
and the sardonic plant, that kills its victim with
the frightful laughter of madness on his countenance.
The knowledge of these and many more
cursed herbs, once known to Medea in the Colchian
land, and transplanted to Greece and Rome with the
enchantments of their use, had been handed, by a long
succession of sorcerers and poisoners, down to Exili
and Beatrice Spara, until they came into the possession
of La Corriveau, the legitimate inheritrix of this
lore of hell.
Before closing the cabinet, La Corriveau
opened one more secret drawer, and took out, with
a hesitating hand, as if uncertain whether to do so
or no, a glittering stiletto, sharp and cruel to see.
She felt the point of it mechanically with her thumb;
and, as if fascinated by the touch, placed it under
her robe. “I may have need of it,”
muttered she, “either to save myself or
to make sure of my work on another. Beatrice Spara
was the daughter of a Sicilian bravo, and she liked
this poignard better than even the poisoned chalice.”
La Corriveau rose up now, well satisfied
with her foresight and preparation. She placed
the ebony casket carefully in her bosom, cherishing
it like an only child, as she walked out of the room
with her quiet, tiger-like tread. Her look into
the future was pleasant to her at this moment.
There was the prospect of an ample reward for her trouble
and risk, and the anticipated pleasure of practising
her skill upon one whose position she regarded as
similar to that of the great dames of the Court,
whom Exili and La Voisin had poisoned during the
high carnival of death, in the days of Louis XIV.
She was now ready, and waited impatiently to depart.
The goodman Dodier brought the caleche
to the door. It was a substantial, two-wheeled
vehicle, with a curious arrangement of springs, made
out of the elastic wood of the hickory. The horse,
a stout Norman pony, well harnessed, sleek and glossy,
was lightly held by the hand of the goodman, who patted
it kindly as an old friend; and the pony, in some
sort, after an equine fashion, returned the affection
of its master.
La Corriveau, with an agility hardly
to be expected from her years, seated herself beside
Fanchon in the caleche, and giving her willing horse
a sharp cut with the lash for spite, not for need, goodman
Dodier said, only to anger him, they set
off at a rapid pace, and were soon out of sight at
the turn of the dark pine-woods, on their way to the
city of Quebec.
Angelique des Meloises had remained
all day in her house, counting the hours as they flew
by, laden with the fate of her unsuspecting rival at
Beaumanoir.
Night had now closed in; the lamps
were lit, the fire again burned red upon the hearth.
Her door was inexorably shut against all visitors.
Lizette had been sent away until the morrow; Angelique
sat alone and expectant of the arrival of La Corriveau.
The gay dress in which she had outshone
all her sex at the ball on the previous night lay
still in a heap upon the floor, where last night she
had thrown it aside, like the robe of innocence which
once invested her. Her face was beautiful, but
cruel, and in its expression terrible as Medea’s
brooding over her vengeance sworn against Creusa for
her sin with Jason. She sat in a careless dishabille,
with one white arm partly bare. Her long golden
locks flowed loosely down her back and touched the
floor, as she sat on her chair and watched and waited
for the coming footsteps of La Corriveau. Her
lips were compressed with a terrible resolution; her
eyes glanced red as they alternately reflected the
glow of the fire within them and of the fire without.
Her hands were clasped nervously together, with a
grip like iron, and lay in her lap, while her dainty
foot marked the rhythm of the tragical thoughts that
swept like a song of doom through her soul.
The few compunctious feelings which
struggled up into her mind were instantly overborne
by the passionate reflection that the lady of Beaumanoir
must die! “I must, or she must one
or other! We cannot both live and marry this
man!” exclaimed she, passionately. “Has
it come to this: which of us shall be the wife,
which the mistress? By God, I would kill him
too, if I thought he hesitated in his choice; but he
shall soon have no choice but one! Her death
be on her own head and on Bigot’s not
on mine!”
And the wretched girl strove to throw
the guilt of the sin she premeditated upon her victim,
upon the Intendant, upon fate, and, with a last subterfuge
to hide the enormity of it from her own eyes, upon
La Corriveau, whom she would lead on to suggest the
crime and commit it! a course which Angelique
tried to believe would be more venial than if it were
suggested by herself! less heinous in her own eyes,
and less wicked in the sight of God.
“Why did that mysterious woman
go to Beaumanoir and place herself in the path of
Angelique des Meloises?” exclaimed she angrily.
“Why did Bigot reject my earnest prayer, for
it was earnest, for a lettre de cachet to send
her unharmed away out of New France?”
Then Angelique sat and listened without
moving for a long time. The clock ticked loud
and warningly. There was a sighing of the wind
about the windows, as if it sought admittance to reason
and remonstrate with her. A cricket sang his
monotonous song on the hearth. In the wainscot
of the room a deathwatch ticked its doleful omen.
The dog in the courtyard howled plaintively as the
hour of midnight sounded upon the Convent bell, close
by. The bell had scarcely ceased ere she was
startled by a slight creaking like the opening of a
door, followed by a whispering and the rustle of a
woman’s garments, as of one approaching with
cautious steps up the stair. A thrill of expectation,
not unmingled with fear, shot through the breast of
Angelique. She sprang up, exclaiming to herself,
“She is come, and all the demons that wait on
murder come with her into my chamber!” A knock
followed on the door. Angelique, very agitated
in spite of her fierce efforts to appear calm, bade
them come in.
Fanchon opened the door, and, with
a courtesy to her mistress, ushered in La Corriveau,
who walked straight into the room and stood face to
face with Angelique.
The eyes of the two women instantly
met in a searching glance that took in the whole look,
bearing, dress, and almost the very thoughts of each
other. In that one glance each knew and understood
the other, and could trust each other in evil, if
not in good.
And there was trust between them.
The evil spirits that possessed each of their hearts
shook hands together, and a silent league was sworn
to in their souls before a word was spoken.
And yet how unlike to human eye were
these two women! how like in God’s
eye, that sees the heart and reads the Spirit, of what
manner it is! Angelique, radiant in the bloom
of youth and beauty, her golden hair floating about
her like a cloud of glory round a daughter of the sun,
with her womanly perfections which made the world seem
brighter for such a revelation of completeness in
every external charm; La Corriveau, stern, dark, angular,
her fine-cut features crossed with thin lines of cruelty
and cunning, no mercy in her eyes, still less on her
lips, and none at all in her heart, cold to every
humane feeling, and warming only to wickedness and
avarice: still these women recognized each other
as kindred spirits, crafty and void of conscience
in the accomplishment of their ends.
Had fate exchanged the outward circumstances
of their lives, each might have been the other easily
and naturally. The proud beauty had nothing in
her heart better than La Corriveau, and the witch of
St. Valier, if born in luxury and endowed with beauty
and wealth, would have rivalled Angelique in seductiveness,
and hardly fallen below her in ambition and power.
La Corriveau saluted Angelique, who
made a sign to Fanchon to retire. The girl obeyed
somewhat reluctantly. She had hoped to be present
at the interview between her aunt and her mistress,
for her curiosity was greatly excited, and she now
suspected there was more in this visit than she had
been told.
Angelique invited La Corriveau to
remove her cloak and broad hat. Seating her in
her own luxurious chair, she sat down beside her, and
began the conversation with the usual platitudes and
commonplaces of the time, dwelling longer upon them
than need was, as if she hesitated or feared to bring
up the real subject of this midnight conference.
“My Lady is fair to look on.
All women will admit that; all men swear to it!”
said La Corriveau, in a harsh voice that grated ominously,
like the door of hell which she was opening with this
commencement of her business.
Angelique replied only with a smile.
A compliment from La Corriveau even was not wasted
upon her; but just now she was on the brink of an abyss
of explanation, looking down into the dark pit, resolved,
yet hesitating to make the plunge.
“No witch or witchery but your
own charms is needed, Mademoiselle,” continued
La Corriveau, falling into the tone of flattery she
often used towards her dupes, “to make what
fortune you will in this world; what pearl ever fished
out of the sea could add a grace to this wondrous hair
of yours? Permit me to touch it, Mademoiselle!”
La Corriveau took hold of a thick
tress, and held it up to the light of the lamp, where
it shone like gold. Angelique shrank back as from
the touch of fire. She withdrew her hair with
a jerk from the hand of La Corriveau. A shudder
passed through her from head to foot. It was the
last parting effort of her good genius to save her.
“Do not touch it!” said
she quickly; “I have set my life and soul on
a desperate venture, but my hair I have
devoted it to our Lady of St. Foye; it is hers, not
mine! Do not touch it, Dame Dodier.”
Angelique was thinking of a vow she
had once made before the shrine of the little church
of Lorette. “My hair is the one thing belonging
to me that I will keep pure,” continued she;
“so do not be angry with me,” she added,
apologetically.
“I am not angry,” replied
La Corriveau, with a sneer. “I am used to
strange humors in people who ask my aid; they always
fall out with themselves before they fall in with
La Corriveau.”
“Do you know why I have sent
for you at this hour, good Dame Dodier?” asked
Angelique, abruptly.
“Call me La Corriveau; I am
not good Dame Dodier. Mine is an ill name, and
I like it best, and so should you, Mademoiselle, for
the business you sent me for is not what people who
say their prayers call good. It was to find your
lost jewels that Fanchon Dodier summoned me to your
abode, was it not?” La Corriveau uttered this
with a suppressed smile of incredulity.
“Ah! I bade Fanchon tell
you that in order to deceive her, not you! But
you know better, La Corriveau! It was not for
the sake of paltry jewels I desired you to come to
the city to see me at this hour of midnight.”
“I conjectured as much!”
replied La Corriveau, with a sardonic smile which
showed her small teeth, white, even, and cruel as those
of a wildcat. “The jewel you have lost
is the heart of your lover, and you thought La Corriveau
had a charm to win it back; was not that it, Mademoiselle?”
Angelique sat upright, gazing boldly
into the eyes of her visitor. “Yes, it
was that and more than that I summoned you for.
Can you not guess? You are wise, La Corriveau,
you know a woman’s desire better than she dare
avow it to herself!”
“Ah!” replied La Corriveau,
returning her scrutiny with the eyes of a basilisk;
a green light flashed out of their dark depths.
“You have a lover, and you have a rival, too!
A woman more potent than yourself, in spite of your
beauty and your fascinations, has caught the eye and
entangled the affections of the man you love, and you
ask my counsel how to win him back and how to triumph
over your rival. Is it not for that you have
summoned La Corriveau?”
“Yes, it is that, and still
more than that!” replied Angelique, clenching
her hands hard together, and gazing earnestly at the
fire with a look of merciless triumph at what she
saw there reflected from her own thoughts distinctly
as if she looked at her own face in a mirror.
“It is all that, and still more
than that, cannot you guess yet why I have
summoned you here?” continued Angelique, rising
and laying her left hand firmly upon the shoulder
of La Corriveau, as she bent her head and whispered
with terrible distinctness in her ear.
La Corriveau heard her whisper and
looked up eagerly. “Yes, I know now, Mademoiselle, you
would kill your rival! There is death in your
eye, in your voice, in your heart, but not in your
hand! You would kill the woman who robs you of
your lover, and you have sent for La Corriveau to
help you in the good work! It is a good work in
the eyes of a woman to kill her rival! but why should
I do that to please you? What do I care for your
lover, Angelique des Meloises?”
Angelique was startled to hear from
the lips of another, words which gave free expression
to her own secret thoughts. A denial was on her
lips, but the lie remained unspoken. She trembled
before La Corriveau, but her resolution was unchanged.
“It was not only to please me,
but to profit yourself that I sent for you!”
Angelique replied eagerly, like one trying to outstrip
her conscience and prevent it from overtaking her
sin. “Hark you! you love gold, La Corriveau!
I will give you all you crave in return for your help, for
help me you shall! you will never repent of it if you
do; you will never cease to regret it if you do not!
I will make you rich, La Corrivean! or else, by God!
do you hear? I swear it! I will have you
burnt for a witch, and your ashes strewn all over St.
Valier!”
La Corriveau spat contemptuously upon
the floor at the holy name. “You are a
fool, Angelique des Meloises, to speak thus to
me! Do you know who and what I am? You are
a poor butterfly to flutter your gay wings against
La Corriveau; but still I like your spirit! women like
you are rare. The blood of Exili could not
have spoken bolder than you do; you want the life
of a woman who has kindled the hell-fire of jealousy
in your heart, and you want me to tell you how to
get your revenge!”
“I do want you to do it, La
Corriveau, and your reward shall be great!”
answered Angelique with a burst of impatience.
She could beat about the bush no longer.
“To kill a woman or a man were
of itself a pleasure even without the profit,”
replied La Corriveau, doggedly. “But why
should I run myself into danger for you, Mademoiselle
des Meloises? Have you gold enough to balance
the risk?”
Angelique had now fairly overleaped
all barriers of reserve. “I will give you
more than your eyes ever beheld, if you will serve
me in this matter, Dame Dodier!”
“Perhaps so, but I am getting
old and trust neither man nor woman. Give a pledge
of your good faith, before you speak one word farther
to me on this business, Mademoiselle des
Meloises.” La Corriveau held out her double
hands significantly.
“A pledge? that is gold you
want!” replied Angelique. “Yes, La
Corriveau; I will bind you to me with chains of gold;
you shall have it uncounted, as I get it, gold
enough to make you the richest woman in St. Valier,
the richest peasant-woman in New France.”
“I am no peasant-woman,”
replied La Corriveau, with a touch of pride, “I
come of a race ancient and terrible as the Roman Caesars!
But pshaw! what have you to do with that? Give
me the pledge of your good faith and I will help you.”
Angelique rose instantly, and, opening
the drawer of an escritoire, took out a long silken
purse filled with louis d’or, which peeped
and glittered through the interstices of the net-work.
She gave it with the air of one who cared nothing
for money.
La Corriveau extended both hands eagerly,
clutching as with the claws of a harpy. She pressed
the purse to her thin bloodless lips, and touched
with the ends of her bony fingers the edges of the
bright coin visible through the silken net.
“This is indeed a rare earnest-penny!”
exclaimed La Corriveau. “I will do your
whole bidding, Mademoiselle; only I must do it in my
own way. I have guessed aright the nature of
your trouble and the remedy you seek. But I cannot
guess the name of your false lover, nor that of the
woman whose doom is sealed from this hour.”
“I will not tell you the name
of my lover,” replied Angelique. She was
reluctant to mention the name of Bigot as her lover.
The idea was hateful to her. “The name
of the woman I cannot tell you, even if I would,”
added she.
“How, Mademoiselle? you put
the death-mark upon one you do not know?”
“I do not know her name.
Nevertheless, La Corriveau, that gold, and ten times
as much, are yours, if you relieve me of the torment
of knowing that the secret chamber of Beaumanoir contains
a woman whose life is death to all my hopes, and disappointment
to all my plans.”
The mention of Beaumanoir startled La Corriveau.
“The lady of Beaumanoir!”
she exclaimed, “whom the Abenaquis brought in
from Acadia? I saw that lady in the woods of St.
Valier, when I was gathering mandrakes one summer
day. She asked me for some water in God’s
name. I cursed her silently, but I gave her milk.
I had no water. She thanked me. Oh, how
she thanked me! nobody ever before thanked La Corriveau
so sweetly as she did! I, even I, bade her a good
journey, when she started on afresh with her Indian
guides, after asking me the distance and direction
of Beaumanoir.”
This unexpected touch of sympathy
surprised and revolted Angelique a little.
“You know her then! That
is rare fortune, La Corriveau,” said she; “she
will remember you, you will have less difficulty in
gaining access to her and winning her confidence.”
La Corriveau clapped her hands, laughing
a strange laugh, that sounded as if it came from a
deep well.
“Know her? That is all
I know; she thanked me sweetly. I said so, did
I not? but I cursed her in my heart when she was gone.
I saw she was both beautiful and good, two
things I hate.”
“Do you call her beautiful?
I care not whether she be good, that will avail nothing
with him; but is she beautiful, La Corriveau?
Is she fairer than I, think you?”
La Corriveau looked at Angelique intently
and laughed. “Fairer than you? Listen!
It was as if I had seen a vision. She was very
beautiful, and very sad. I could wish it were
another than she, for oh, she spoke to me the sweetest
I was ever spoken to since I came into the world.”
Angelique ground her teeth with anger.
“What did you do, La Corriveau? Did you
not wish her dead? Did you think the Intendant
or any man could not help loving her to the rejection
of any other woman in the world? What did you
do?”
“Do? I went on picking
my mandrakes in the forest, and waited for you to
send for La Corriveau. You desire to punish the
Intendant for his treachery in forsaking you for one
more beautiful and better!”
It was but a bold guess of La Corriveau,
but she had divined the truth. The Intendant
Bigot was the man who was playing false with Angelique.
Her words filled up the measure of
Angelique’s jealous hate, and confirmed her
terrible resolution. Jealousy is never so omnipotent
as when its rank suspicions are fed and watered by
the tales of others.
“There can be but one life between
her and me!” replied the vehement girl; “Angelique
des Meloises would die a thousand deaths rather
than live to feed on the crumbs of any man’s
love while another woman feasts at his table.
I sent for you, La Corriveau, to take my gold and kill
that woman!”
“Kill that woman! It is
easily said, Mademoiselle; but I will not forsake
you, were she the Madonna herself! I hate her
for her goodness, as you hate her for her beauty.
Lay another purse by the side of this, and in thrice
three days there shall be weeping in the Chateau of
Beaumanoir, and no one shall know who has killed the
cuckquean of the Chevalier Intendant!”
Angelique sprang up with a cry of
exultation, like a pantheress seizing her prey.
She clasped La Corriveau in her arms and kissed her
dark, withered cheek, exclaiming, “Yes, that
is her name! His cuckquean she is; his wife she
is not and never shall be! Thanks, a million
golden thanks, La Corriveau, if you fulfil your prophecy!
In thrice three days from this hour, was it not that
you said?”
“Understand me!” said
La Corriveau, “I serve you for your money, not
for your liking! but I have my own joy in making my
hand felt in a world which I hate and which hates
me!” La Corriveau held out her hands as if the
ends of her fingers were trickling poison. “Death
drops on whomsoever I send it,” said she, “so
secretly and so subtly that the very spirits of air
cannot detect the trace of the aqua tofana.”
Angelique listened with amaze, yet
trembled with eagerness to hear more. “What!
La Corriveau, have you the secret of the aqua tofana,
which the world believes was burnt with its possessors
two generations ago, on the Place de Greve?”
“Such secrets never die,”
replied the poisoner; “they are too precious!
Few men, still fewer women, are there who would not
listen at the door of hell to learn them. The
king in his palace, the lady in her tapestried chamber,
the nun in her cell, the very beggar on the street,
would stand on a pavement of fire to read the tablets
which record the secret of the aqua tofana.
Let me see your hand,” added she abruptly, speaking
to Angelique.
Angelique held out her hand; La Corriveau
seized it. She looked intently upon the slender
fingers and oval palm. “There is evil enough
in these long, sharp spatulae of yours,”
said she, “to ruin the world. You are worthy
to be the inheritrix of all I know. These fingers
would pick fruit off the forbidden tree for men to
eat and die! The tempter only is needed, and
he is never far off! Angelique des Meloises,
I may one day teach you the grand secret; meantime
I will show you that I possess it.”