<h2 class="vspace"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead">THE MONTE CARLO TRUNK MURDERESS</span></h2>
<p class="drop-cap4"><span class="smcap1">When</span> a young woman deliberately embarks
upon a career of crime she is certain of a
fair amount of success, provided she is
pretty enough to attract men to her side. A beauty,
however black her record may be, need never want for
male assistance. If she is clever and designing she can,
as a rule, lay her plans with such discretion that if
arrest follows she is able to plead that she was merely
the tool of a designing man.</p>
<p>The trick has succeeded nine times out of ten. Juries
naturally pity the "weaker sex," and at the Old Bailey
I have seen women let off with a few months' imprisonment
whilst their really less culpable partners in wrongdoing
have been sent to penal servitude for no other
reason than that they were of the masculine gender.
Thus, it will be admitted that the female criminal has
at least one advantage over her male colleague.</p>
<p>But Marie Goold never was a beauty. As a young
girl she was plain-looking and her manner repelled.
She made no friends, and the passage of time did not
bring any improvement in her appearance. She was
clever and resourceful, however, and when a desire to
mix in fashionable circles and to acquire riches quickly
determined her to turn criminal she relied solely on
her brains and not on her face. Yet she married three
times, and on each occasion above her own position,
and from first to last she always had at least one man<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</SPAN></span>
in tow who was completely dominated by her and obeyed
her implicitly.</p>
<p>Her first marriage was the result of pique on her
part. There was a youth in her native village—she
was born in France—who for some quaint reason fell
in love with her. He may have admired her vitriolic
tongue and her fearlessness, but the fact remains that
he proposed. Marie Girodin refused him, but the
youth did not tell his parents of his failure, and they,
in their anxiety to save him, began a campaign of
calumny against the "charmer." It was a fatal move
on their part, for Marie, just to spite them, married
their son and then discarded him, because she decided
that he could be of no use to her. He was wretched
and unhappy, but so hypnotized by his wife that when
she returned to him after a long absence he was almost
delirious with joy, and promptly handed over his savings.
Marie had been in Paris and London in the meantime,
but she only remained at home for three months. Her
husband died suddenly, and the widow immediately
went abroad again. It was perhaps merely a coincidence
that the young man expired just when Marie had made
up her mind that she would accept the gallant English
army officer who had been courting her under the
impression that she was free.</p>
<p>Once more Marie ventured on the matrimonial sea.
Her second marriage was an improvement on the first,
and for a while she was content to spend money and
enjoy herself. The captain's means, however, would
not stand the strain, and Marie left for a Continental
tour by herself. She stopped for a couple of days at
Nice and then departed; and when she had gone two
thousand pounds' worth of jewellery disappeared with
her. There was no proof of her guilt, and she was not
molested, but Marie's poverty ceased abruptly, and
for a few months she was able to indulge herself.</p>
<p>Then the captain died, for Marie had, curiously<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</SPAN></span>
enough, grown very tired of him too. His ideas of
honour and honesty had disturbed her. She knew that
he sternly disapproved of theft and forgery, and to
obtaining money by false pretences—one of her little
hobbies—the captain was fanatically opposed. Therefore,
his death came as a welcome release to her. Black
suited her, and if money was scarce she had a collection
of jewellery which was her precaution against a "rainy
day."</p>
<p>She was now nearer thirty than twenty, and it required
all the art of which she was capable to make
herself presentable. Her face was thin and marked,
her eyes were black and repellent, and her skin sallow.
People shrank from her until she began to talk, for
then her rippling voice poured forth stories of adventures
in which names of famous men and women in France
and Great Britain appeared with her own.</p>
<p>Strangers were impressed by her. She never asserted
that she was on intimate terms with Presidents and
Cabinet Ministers, but she inferred it, and the credulous
crowded round her. Once she got them interested she
held them. She was clever enough to be able to do that.</p>
<p>But talking did not produce money, and Marie, who
owed thousands, began to feel a draught. She did not
ask for loans. Such a procedure would be tantamount
to suicide, but she resorted to trickery to replenish her
purse. Thus she flattered and coaxed an English
lady into giving her the position of secretary-companion.
Marie protested that she only wanted companionship
herself, and that she would not accept a salary, as
she had plenty of money lying at her bankers. The
English woman, captivated by her chatter, agreed, and
a few weeks later was lamenting the loss of six hundred
pounds which had "gone astray" while she and her
"companion-secretary" were travelling to San Sebastian.</p>
<p>The day after the disaster Marie told her that she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</SPAN></span>
had been summoned to Paris to consult her lawyers
about some property left to her by her husband. She
parted from her employer with tears in her eyes, but
she did not go to the French capital. She fixed upon
Marseilles, and, taking up her headquarters in the
leading hotel there, had a riotous time on the money
she had stolen from the English lady.</p>
<p>The six hundred pounds and Marie were soon separated,
and once more she was penniless. She still had her
jewellery, but she was loath to sell it, and in desperation
she set on foot various swindles. They all came to
nothing, and at last, feeling that the police were watching
her, she became panic-stricken, and fled to London.
They could not harm her there, as she was, by virtue
of her second marriage, a British subject.</p>
<p>In London she was friendless, while hotel managers
were hard-hearted and would allow no credit. Poor
Marie was compelled to work, and, of course, she hated
the prospect, but necessity compelled her to dispose
of her jewellery, and with the money to start a dressmaker's
establishment. She found a coy-looking shop
in an unobtrusive street in the West End of London,
and with a small and select stock began her new career.</p>
<p>The woman, a criminal to the finger-tips, utterly
unscrupulous and merciless, had no intention of settling
down to the drudgery of a dressmaker's life. She
regarded her establishment as a spider must regard his
web. Money was not to be earned legitimately, but
by trickery. Money and more money was all Marie
thought of, and, with the aid of her crafty tongue, she
extracted various sums from trusting and sympathetic
clients.</p>
<p>She could ingratiate herself into the confidences of
middle-aged English ladies who were losing their attractions
by grossly flattering them, and, because she
was no rival so far as looks were concerned, they became
friends of hers rather than clients.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</SPAN></span>
Her first exploit in London was a great success. A
well-to-do woman of fifty, who had been fascinated by
"Madame's" promise to keep her young, called to see
her, and found the dressmaker in tears. The usual
question ensued, and then Marie whispered that the
broker's men were in the next room, and that she was
ruined. The sympathetic customer paid the amount
which Marie said was owing, and as the whole story was
a lie the "dressmaker" was sixty pounds to the good.</p>
<p>Hitherto Marie's criminal activities had centred on
obtaining money by means of fraud. Her first two
husbands may have died under suspicious circumstances,
but it was only suspicion after all, and it was not until
she was a British subject and a resident in the West
End of London that she soared to greater criminal
heights.</p>
<p>The widow began to think of marrying again. A
husband would be decidedly useful in London. The
English were inclined to regard her with suspicion
because she had no man attached to her, and Marie
meant to abandon the dressmaking business because
the comparatively small sums which she obtained from
confiding customers were of little use to her. She
wanted thousands now, for she had become a confirmed
gambler, and the luck as a rule went against her. She
therefore, as a preliminary, commenced a campaign to
find a husband, and she had not to wait long for
success.</p>
<p>It was said at the time of the final catastrophe that
Marie first met Vere Goold when the latter called to
pay an account for a relative, but there was no confirmation
of this, and there is reason to believe that
she made his acquaintance at a restaurant in the West
End.</p>
<p>Vere Goold was an Irishman of good family, who
devoted his time to absorbing intoxicating liquors.
A man of education and some ability, drink and drugs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</SPAN></span>
had robbed him of all his will power. He had been sent
to London by friends and relations who were anxious
for him to reform, and they made him a small allowance,
hoping that he would find it impossible to live on it,
and would, therefore, seek some form of employment.</p>
<p>Goold, however, was content to take the part of
the shabby genteel "loafer," and for some years he
was well known in most of the taprooms in the West End.
When he was in funds he was in the habit of entertaining
acquaintances in one of the cheap Soho restaurants,
but these rare appearances in the rôle of host were
invariably marked by ejection from the particular
restaurant. Now and then he paid a small fine at
Marlborough Street for being "drunk and disorderly,"
but on the whole Vere Goold had only one enemy, and
that was himself. He was otherwise quite inoffensive
until he came into the life of the adventuress.</p>
<p>The moment she decided to become Vere Goold's
wife there was no way of escape for him. The woman
was a human snake, and he was the frightened, timid
rabbit. She dosed him with liquor and did all the
thinking for him. When she led him to the nearest
register office he plaintively said "Yes" to everything,
and it took his drink-soddened mind some hours to
realize that he was a married man, the husband of
Marie, the woman with the evil face and the tongue
of honey.</p>
<p>Marie Goold was delighted with her third husband.
She compiled a list of his relatives, most of them of
good social position, and, what was more important,
she discovered there was a baronetcy in the family,
and that if only certain persons died her husband would
succeed to it and she would become Lady Goold! Ambition
and vanity caused her to make her husband
assume the baronetcy. By now the dressmaking business
had been disposed of, and the married couple had
about a hundred pounds between them. Marie voted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</SPAN></span>
for a protracted honeymoon on the Continent, and,
to lend distinction to their adventures, it was as Sir
Vere and Lady Goold that they left London for Paris,
"her ladyship" plentifully stocked with clothes which
she had obtained from the wholesale houses without
troubling to pay for them.</p>
<p>But when their funds vanished they experienced many
vicissitudes of fortune, and Vere Goold, who waited
on his wife like a slave, came in for much abuse. He
would listen meekly to her upbraidings, and then wander
forth, hoping to meet an acquaintance on the boulevards
whom he might "tap" for a few francs. They were
turned out of several hotels and boarding-houses. Once
Goold borrowed a little money and gave it to Marie.
She promptly took a room at an hotel, and as the manager
insisted upon cash down, even for their meals, she let
her husband go without food, whilst she enjoyed the
excellent cuisine of the hotel.</p>
<p>They experienced occasional bursts of sunshine when
Marie succeeded in extracting loans from confiding
hotel acquaintances, but the inevitable sequel to these
minor triumphs was flight to escape prosecution for
fraud. The helpless husband followed her about like
a tame dog, and when she told him that she had found
a way out of all their troubles he believed her, and
declared his acquiescence in everything she said and did.</p>
<p>I have mentioned that Marie Goold was a gambler,
and in the darkest hour she remembered Monte Carlo.
She was positive that she knew the way to break the
bank. Given a little capital, she was confident that
she would make them both rich beyond the dreams of
avarice.</p>
<p>The adventuress craved for big money now. For
years she had lived by her wits, and the result was
misery, mental and physical. She had swindled scores
of acquaintances, and it was hardly safe for her to
appear in London, Paris and other cities. She knew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</SPAN></span>
that the police of several countries had her name on
their books, and for all her cleverness she had nothing
to show except a weak-minded drunkard of a husband
and her own ill-nourished condition. But she felt
certain that Monte Carlo would prove their salvation.
It was her last hope. She had expended all other
sources of income, and now everything would depend
on her cleverness as a gambler and the system she had
invented.</p>
<p>For ten days they were held up in Paris owing to
lack of funds, but Vere Goold wrote pitiful letters to
friends in England, and a few of them responded, while
Marie, making the most of her assumed title of "Lady
Goold," obtained on approval a diamond ring from a
jeweller. She was to have it on approval for twenty-four
hours, and then, if she decided to keep it, was to
pay cash down. But before the twenty-four hours
elapsed the ring was pawned and she and the "baronet"
were in the express for the Riviera, exulting over the
good time coming. She had worked out an infallible
system with which she could smash the bank, and henceforth
they were—so she assured him—to have no difficulty
in living up to their "baronetcy."</p>
<p>Marie was so anxious to keep as much of her small
store of money as possible for the tables in the Casino
that she became economically minded, and, instead
of going to an hotel, took apartments in a Villa. She
sent for her niece to act as a sort of housekeeper, because
she would have to spend her days in the gaming-rooms.
The niece, who was only twenty-four, was delighted to
accept the invitation. She had not experienced much
pleasure in her life, and the prospect of a season at
Monte Carlo enchanted her.</p>
<p>It is not difficult to guess Marie Goold's experiences
as a would-be breaker of the bank at Monte Carlo. The
"infallible system," which had worked out so well
on paper, proved a delusion and a snare, and Marie<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</SPAN></span>
returned from the Casino in a towering rage with everybody.
For hours her husband had patiently waited
outside the Casino to accompany her home. He was
not allowed to enter by his strong-minded wife, who
had ordered him to hang about outside until she was
tired of playing. Vere Goold would have willingly
allowed her to use him as a door mat, and he was quite
content to take her to the Casino and remain in the
grounds until she was ready for him. He had a vague
idea that his clever wife would overcome all difficulties,
for he believed her to be a genius.</p>
<p>Four visits to the Casino resulted in Marie being
penniless again. The position was desperate. They
had obtained the rooms at the Villa Menesimy without
the formality of rent in advance or references, the landlord
having been overwhelmed by the honour of "Sir
Vere and Lady Goold's" acquaintance. Nevertheless,
at the end of the month he would demand what was
owing, and the sum was so small that inability to pay
it would arouse his suspicions, and then they would
have to fly from Monte Carlo, and Marie would be
unable to test her system further. But she refused to
admit that her system was faulty. Her reverses she
put down to sheer bad luck.</p>
<p>Marie had to search Monte Carlo for a likely victim
to provide funds. In this way precious hours were
wasted. She told her husband that she ought to be
at the Casino coining money instead of lunching as
cheaply as possible in expensive hotels and restaurants,
but it was necessary for the vulture to go after her
prey, and the loss of time could not be helped.</p>
<p>She achieved her object with characteristic cunning.
One afternoon she "accidentally" stumbled against a
lady in the hall of an hotel, and instantly apologized
very humbly. From apology to general conversation
was an easy step, and the stranger was fascinated by
Marie's ready tongue. When they had made their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</SPAN></span>
names known to one another, "Lady Goold" begged
to be allowed to present her husband "Sir Vere," to
Madame Levin, and the latter, who was the widow of
a wealthy Stockholm merchant, gladly accorded permission.
She had social ambitions, and she welcomed
"Sir Vere and Lady Goold" with more than ordinary
cordiality. Marie, fashionably dressed and with her
sallow cheeks lightened by a skilful use of powder, deferred
in the most alluring manner to the rich widow.
That she was wealthy was obvious from her display of
jewellery, for Madame Levin carried thousands of
pounds worth with her and frankly invited the admiration
of strangers.</p>
<p>Marie Goold thought that Madame Levin would
prove a source of income, and she was, therefore, surprised
and exasperated when she discovered that the
lady was close-fisted. Instead of obtaining hundreds
it took Marie a fortnight to borrow forty pounds from
her rich friend, and in return for that small loan she
had to bow and scrape to her, and agree with everything
she said. In fact, the clever adventuress had
to subordinate her own opinions to the clumsily-expressed
and frequently irritating statements to which
the widow gave vent.</p>
<p>Her experiences leading up to the borrowing of that
forty pounds should have convinced her that Madame
Levin would prove a worrying creditor. The loan
eventually passed into the keeping of the owner of the
Casino, and Marie once again had to try and "raise
the wind."</p>
<p>It maddened her to think that Monte Carlo was
crowded with wealthy persons of both sexes on whom
she was unable to practise any of her money-raising
tricks, simply because they would not have anything
to do with her. "Sir Vere and Lady Goold" were
for some unexplained reason at a discount, and squabbles
and hysteria were of frequent occurrence at the Villa<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</SPAN></span>
Menesimy when Marie came back from the gaming-tables
without a sou.</p>
<p>Then Madame Levin began to press for repayment,
and when her debtor pleaded temporary embarrassment
owing to non-receipt of a large remittance from
her husband's agent in London she showed her teeth.
Clearly Madame Levin regarded forty pounds as a
very large sum, and she pestered "Lady Goold" every
time they met. The adventuress was at her wit's
end. She had to look pleasant and chat amiably with
the rich widow, and ignore her insults, and yet she
longed to get her white hands round the throat of her
persecutor. She hated the Stockholm widow with a
ferocity that was akin to madness, for Madame Levin
was angrily demanding payment of the debt while
Marie was actually in want of money to buy the
necessaries of life.</p>
<p>The two women had a violent quarrel, and Marie
must have unconsciously revealed something of her
real self, for Madame Levin became afraid of her. Perhaps
she saw murder in the evil eyes of the adventuress.
She had been told already that Marie Goold was not
entitled to the prefix "Lady," and from a trustworthy
source she had ascertained that they were a couple of
needy adventurers with a very shady and shadowy past.</p>
<p>After that Madame Levin seldom saw her, though
she continued to write angry letters asking for the return
of her money. Marie Goold ignored these appeals
and threats. She was too absorbed in her own immediate
difficulties now. Even poor Vere Goold, that
helpless incompetent, was feeling the strain. For
some days he was actually obliged to keep sober owing
to the shortage of ready money.</p>
<p>Every day made matters worse. The Casino was
not mentioned, and the Goolds were living in dire
poverty, chained to the Villa Menesimy by their penniless
condition. Then it was that the wolfish woman<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</SPAN></span>
thought out the second great plan which she declared
could save them.</p>
<p>She did not condescend to take her husband into her
fullest confidence, but she gave him an outline of her
latest plans. He agreed, of course. It was too late
now for this weak-minded sot to try and emancipate
his soul from the thraldom of his domineering wife,
and as usual he was content to leave everything to her.</p>
<p>The first move was to get Marie's niece to spend a
couple of days away from the apartments in the Villa
Menesimy. This was accomplished easily. Then Marie
called on Madame Levin with a smile and an apology,
and asked her to come to the Villa Menesimy on the
following Sunday to have tea with herself and her
husband, and receive the forty pounds to which she
was entitled.</p>
<p>Madame Levin hesitated. She disliked Vere Goold,
the victim of drink and drugs, and she was afraid of
Mrs. Goold, who was obviously a person who would
stick at nothing. But when Marie emphasized her
willingness to settle her debt the widow forgot her fears.
She had arranged to leave Monte Carlo within a few
days, and she was anxious to recover her forty pounds
before she took her departure.</p>
<p>The Sunday came, and at half-past four Madame
Levin entered the apartments the Goolds occupied
at the Villa Menesimy. She was never seen alive again,
for Marie Goold in inviting her to tea did so to take
her life. Vere Goold, his faculties paralysed by drugs,
opened the door to Madame Levin, and presently Marie
emerged from the kitchen to greet her and to explain
laughingly that her niece had been called away, and
that she was compelled to prepare the tea herself.
She placed a chair for her visitor, and returned to the
kitchen, whilst Vere Goold, his whole body trembling,
sat facing Madame Levin, trying to make conversation.</p>
<p>The widow forgot her doubts and fears, and chatted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</SPAN></span>
brightly to the accompaniment of the pleasant jingle
of tea-things from the kitchen. Goold mumbled answers
to her remarks, but the widow thought that his nervousness
and distracted condition were due to drink
and drugs, and she did her best to put him at his ease.</p>
<p>The noise in the kitchen ceased abruptly, but Madame
Levin did not turn her head. She talked on of her
home in Stockholm and of her future plans, and her
voice was the only one heard as Marie Goold crept from
the kitchen with a formidable-looking poker in her
right hand. Madame Levin's back was towards the
kitchen door, and she never heard the footfalls of her
murderess.</p>
<p>Vere Goold sprang to his feet as the poker was raised
by his wife and brought down with terrific force upon
the head of the unfortunate visitor. She collapsed
without a sound, and then Marie finished her off with a
knife, her husband looking on dazed and stupefied.</p>
<p>She roused him with an oath, and, realizing that they
were both in danger, he worked as she commanded.
They had a big trunk in the bedroom, and this was
hauled out. A large carpet-bag was found which
could hold the head and legs of the murdered woman,
and the rest of the corpse was packed in the trunk.</p>
<p>Late that night the niece returned, and she noticed
at once that the carpet and curtains of the sitting-room
were splashed with blood, but her aunt anticipated
questions by informing her that her uncle had had a
fit, during which he had vomited blood.</p>
<p>The next evening—the murder took place on Sunday,
August 4, 1907—the guilty couple prepared for flight.
They could not leave the trunk and the carpet-bag
behind them, and they took both with them, Goold
carrying the latter. The trunk was conveyed in a cab
to the railway station, and tickets taken for Marseilles.</p>
<p>They arrived at their destination in the early hours
of Tuesday morning, and Goold immediately ordered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</SPAN></span>
the trunk to be labelled "Charing Cross, London,"
and despatched there. Then with his wife he went to
an hotel for rest and refreshment.</p>
<p>It was now the duty of the goods clerk at Marseilles
Station to attend to the trunk, but when he came near
it he was surprised by a fearful odour. Closer examination
proved that blood was oozing from beneath the
lid. Pons—that was the clerk's name—went at once
to the hotel and saw the Goolds. They explained that
the trunk was filled with poultry, hence the blood,
but the railway official was not satisfied, and he called
at a police station, where the inspector instructed him
to inform the Goolds that the trunk would not be allowed
to leave Marseilles until it had been opened and
the contents examined in their presence.</p>
<p>Pons's first visit to the hotel had aroused doubts in
Marie's mind, and she told her husband to get ready
to steal out of Marseilles. He quickly obeyed, and
they were actually emerging from the hotel when the
goods clerk arrived for the second time. He conveyed
to them the decision of the police, and Marie, conscious
that they were in a tight corner, staked her life on bluff.</p>
<p>"Very well," she said haughtily, "we will take a
cab and drive to the station, and when you have opened
the trunk you can apologize for having been so impertinent
as to doubt my word." The cab was called, and
Marie and her husband with the large carpet-bag got
in, but the woman's heart must have sunk when Pons
entered after them, as though they were under arrest
already.</p>
<p>The cab rattled along, and no one spoke until Mrs.
Goold clutched the clerk's arm and whispered to him
that she would be willing to pay ten thousand francs
if he would let them go. Pons sat immovable. He
was not to be bribed, and the attempt to do so proved
that his suspicions were well-founded.</p>
<p>The examination of the contents of the trunk and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</SPAN></span>
carpet-bag indicated that a brutal murder had been
committed, and before the two prisoners had time to
confess the police identified the victim, and unravelled
the whole story. Marie and her husband were accordingly
sent back to Monte Carlo to stand their trial.</p>
<p>The woman was the chief figure in Court, her husband
always presenting a shivering, weak-kneed appearance
in the dock. Marie Goold was clearly the person who
had murdered Madame Levin, and the sentence in her
case was death. Her husband was consigned to penal
servitude for life.</p>
<p>After a sensational trial they were removed to the
French prison at Cayenne, and there in July, 1908,
Marie Goold died of typhoid fever. Fourteen months
later Vere Goold, driven insane by remorse and the
deprivation of drink and drugs, committed suicide.</p>
<p>The fate of the niece was pathetic. She was so upset
by her association with the murderers that despite
every attention she faded away, dying before she attained
her twenty-seventh birthday.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />