experimental animals as extremely toxic, as a first-quality coagulant poison; my wifeâs blood could and would be analyzed; everything pointed in one direction, and any amateur would be able to provide rigorous proof of the crime. That is, prove what had occurred. But to prove why it had occurred? That was the task of the court. But only the person who had understood all this could sit in judgment . Ultimately only I could judge this murder.
XII
The case was so hopelessly clear that lying was obviously not a practical response. Given that the crime was one that needed to be understood in psychological terms, it may seem that a more promising approach might have been to present oneself to the judges trying the case as an entirelybestial, pathological personality who had acted in a fit of unbridled rage and who thereforeâand this is what rules out this at-first-blush viable approachâbelonged, not on the scaffold, nor in prison or the penal colony for life, but permanently under lock and key. Many people would undoubtedly find the prospect of lifelong confinement in an asylum a better fate than execution or deportation. But I did not.
I lived through several weeks in the psychiatric observation unit of the remand prison infirmary. With the help of my lawyer, my father had seen to it that I be subjected to a court-ordered mental examination. I endured one grilling after another by doctors and intelligence tests that lasted for hours and made me appear an idiot; I attempted, while in constant visible, audible, and tangible proximity to raving, raging, shrieking, howling, babbling, self-lacerating, excrement-eating persons, in the presence of the authentically mentally ill, of persons with incurable intellectual and emotional disorders, I attempted, summoning all my strength and all my resources, to feign illness. But I did not keep it up long enoughâand I will say: though their very lives may depend on it, ninety out of a hundred men are not capable of feigning severe mental illness, beyond a certain point, without falling prey to it.
For me the universe has never been built on entirely sound foundations. I have already said that in my youth I became, under the influence of my father, an anarchist, an atheist, and a negativist to the point of being a cynic. In addition to this the internal pressure (call it conscience or whatever you want, you will never grasp it), in addition lack of sleep, in addition the continuous observation, the formulaic questions, driven into an unstable personâs soul as though with a sharp chisel, of the court psychiatrist, âcourtâ being the operative word, inaddition the bad food, the squalor, the latter all the worse the more one gives in to oneâs own destructive urges and wrecks everything there is to be wrecked in oneâs cell. (Who is not tempted now and again to smash everything in sight to bits?)
No one who has not experienced it could imagine the boundless exhaustion and enervation produced by being constantly face-to-face with oneself, the nights, the dreams, and nothing but a hostile atmosphere on every sideâyes, Georg Letham the younger, did you expect a seaside holiday?
No matter, the day comes when your resistance breaks and you capitulate. Like a true madman I yearned to speak rationally, eat normally again, and it was high time. I was skeletally emaciated, and any force of mind I may have had was gone. My bones were poking through my skin, causing sores on the thin, dry, withered skin at the small of my back and beneath my shoulder blades.
Most terrible of all was that, one night, toward daybreak, I realized I had no hope of hope anymore. And that I had had no âhope of hopeâ since that rainy night. It was toward morning, at an hour when the truly criminally insane and the malingerers alike, through either natural tiredness or the effect of soporifics (usually scopolamine in powerful doses), grew quiet and slept. I was the only
Victor Milan, Clayton Emery