Georg Letham

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Authors: Ernst Weiß
Tags: General Fiction
finances, and her social position, all falling under the rubric of bridge , of course not an adequate means of fulfillment. One day she had given in to her destructive or self-destructive urges, had come to me. That had been in the afternoon. In the evening, when I entered the apartment and camped downstairs in the study, she had called her daughter and her son-in-law and in presentiment of her fate had summoned the two of them. The strange telephone calls, all three of them (or were there only two?), were from these relatives, though they came too late in any case.
    And I, as confident as a sleepwalker, had behaved more idiotically than any idiot! Think of it! I leave the scene of the crime without having scrupulously destroyed the most important piece of evidence. I fail to mention the fact of my wife’s death to the servants, to the neighbors encountered in the street that night. And that’s not all! I make the most unnecessary disclosure imaginable to my father, an entirely irrelevant person in this regard, and produce in him an equally idiotic reaction,namely, his flight to City X on the next Nordbahn train. The next day he fails to appear at work (for the first and last time in his life!). The noose tightens around my neck still more–through my own doing and his. If he had at least given me the money, if not a hundred thousand, then at least enough for me to get a cab and drive back, I would have been at the scene of the crime an hour earlier, would have destroyed the vial in time. Only the first four hours were critical. After that nothing could have been proven. I would have had to hold out with my wife for those four hours.
    No, if the old man was at fault, it lay deeper, it went back a long time. What had happened now was incidental. Why accuse him–I could have hired a cab even with no money in my pocket and paid the driver when I got home. I always had enough money around for that. I had just had a fit of blindness and stupidity. For what else can you call it when a thinking person, one with such a high opinion of himself that he believes he is capable of discovering the invisible scarlet-fever virus, when such a person advertises the visible proof, the palpable evidence of his criminal act, even though what he wants to do, what he has to do, is conceal it. I had run to the old man to confess to him, thereby helping him atone for his old sins. And on top of that the experimental error mentioned above, one of the grossest type. What had happened to the vial containing Toxin Y? Instead of destroying it (washing it out under the tap, scratching off the label, tossing the empty vial out onto the street, along with the syringe)–instead of doing that, I throw the glass container, stoppered, containing a quite considerable residue of Toxin Y, into the toilet bowl in my wife’s small, almond green private lavatory. And do I at least pull the chain, to wash the thing into the sewer main?By no means. And the syringe? No, this too I fail to destroy. It remains in the bedroom, lying on a glass tabletop. I was so used to having it around, that precisely made, delicate little instrument!
    So I considerately put weapons into my enemies’ hands. My wife’s sudden death, my unwillingness to prevail upon the neighborhood physician however reluctant he was to come at night, my refusal to attempt the recommended camphor or caffeine injection (we had camphor and caffeine in the house because my wife had become a hypochondriac after her illness and knew about their effects), the syringe with the slightly bloody needle on the night table next to the lamp, above all the little vial that now lay on the mirrored tabletop, conscientiously placed in evidence and open to official scrutiny, its label already half dry!–And the handwriting, becoming clearer every moment as the label dried, was mine and no one else’s.–What remained of the whitish crystalline powder could be identified from my

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