<h2 class="vspace"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead">THE MURDER OF MADAME HOUET</span></h2>
<p class="drop-cap4"><span class="smcap1">The</span> annals of French crime are rich in dramatic
and extraordinary episodes, but none can
excel in breathless interest the story of the
murder of Madame Houet and the discovery and punishment
of her murderers twelve years after her tragic
death.</p>
<p>Madame Houet was a widow with a fortune estimated
to exceed two hundred and fifty thousand francs, who
lived with her son in a little house in the Rue St. Jacques,
Paris. Her only daughter was married to a wine merchant
named Robert, who was reputed to be well off.
The old lady's son was a big, powerful fellow, whose
weak brain prevented him earning more than a precarious
livelihood, a fact which annoyed his penurious
parent. She scraped and saved and half-starved herself
to be able to add a few coins daily to her store.
In the circumstances, it is not astonishing that amongst
her neighbours she should have had the reputation of
being worth a great deal more than she actually was.</p>
<p>The gossips never tired of discussing her hidden
wealth, and everybody was prepared to hear of her
murder for the sake of her hoard. Even her son-in-law
was ignorant of the extent of her savings—the old lady
would never discuss the subject with him or anyone
else—and, after making allowances for the exaggerations
of the neighbours, he came to the conclusion that
his wife's share of her inheritance would not be less<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</SPAN></span>
than a quarter of a million francs. There were times,
too, when he comforted himself with the assurance that
his wife's brother would not live very long. More than
one doctor had hinted that the weak brain would soon
affect the body, and that he would suddenly collapse
and die.</p>
<p>These thoughts induced the wine merchant to sell
his business and retire. Robert had always wanted
to live the life of a gentleman, as he termed it. He
was fond of the theatre and the restaurants, and he
had a mania for tempting fortune on the racecourse
and on the roulette table. So when he observed signs
of decline in his mother-in-law—and his wife often
wept as she told him that the old lady was fading away—he
found a purchaser for his shop, pocketed the proceeds,
and went the pace, confident that before he had
spent his capital he would be in possession of Madame
Houet's cash.</p>
<p>But Madame Houet was tougher than he thought,
and easily outlasted the twenty-five thousand francs
Robert had received for his shop. For a few months
Monsieur and Madame Robert were seen everywhere,
and they became familiar figures in the fashionable
restaurants and theatres. When he came to his last
thousand-franc note Robert determined to risk it all
on a visit to a gambling den. He carried out his intention,
and returned home at three in the morning
penniless.</p>
<p>He was now not only without resources, but heavily
in debt. As the husband of Madame Houet's heiress
he had been given extended credit, but the ex-wine
merchant knew that if he failed to keep his agreements
his creditors would complain to his mother-in-law.</p>
<p>But could he hold his creditors back until the old
lady died? Several times a week he called on her and
noticed with increasing alarm that she was daily improving
in health. Her appetite was prodigious, as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</SPAN></span>
he discovered every time he took her out to lunch.
Driven desperate, the penniless man tried forgery,
and by imitating his mother-in-law's signature on the
back of a bill induced the merchant who had purchased
his business to advance him twelve thousand five hundred
francs for three months.</p>
<p>The weeks passed all too swiftly, and when only a
fortnight remained of the three months the forger's
position was worse than ever. Fourteen days more
and the forged bill would be presented and dishonoured,
and Madame Houet would repudiate the signature.
Robert went for long walks every night to think over
the situation, and eventually he found a solution.</p>
<p>"I have urgent business to attend to," he told his
wife one morning, "and I am afraid I shall have to be
often away from your side. Why not pay that long-promised
visit to your aunt in Marseilles? I should be
happier if I knew you were with her."</p>
<p>His wife agreed, and for a month was out of Paris,
and during that month the tragedy occurred.</p>
<p>Robert had decided to murder his mother-in-law
so that his wife might receive at once her share of the
estate. He knew that the old lady had recently made
her will bequeathing her fortune in equal shares to her
son and her daughter, and, therefore, there was no
danger of Julia losing her inheritance. The ex-wine
merchant, however, was not capable of carrying out
the plan unaided, and he sought an acquaintance,
Bastien, a jobbing carpenter, who promised to help
in the murder for a fee of twenty thousand francs,
to be paid within thirty days of Madame Robert's
receipt of her legacy. The terms were agreed to, and
they began to make their plans.</p>
<p>There was a big garden attached to a house in the
Rue Vaugirard, and Robert rented both for a month,
and the night before the murder he and Bastien dug
a grave for their intended victim, who at the time they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</SPAN></span>
were working was busy counting her savings with a
view to sending the money to the bank in the morning.
The widow may have been a miser, but she had a great
deal of common sense, and she never kept large sums
in her home.</p>
<p>Curiously enough, she and her son had of late begun
to quarrel fiercely. She had accused him of being lazy,
and he had flung reproaches at her, and it was known
in the Rue St. Jacques that the Houets were constantly
at loggerheads.</p>
<p>"There'll be a tragedy in that house," said the landlord
of the inn at the corner. "The police ought to
be told. It is not safe to leave the old woman alone
with that crazy son of hers."</p>
<p>When the ill-feeling between the mother and son was
at its height, Bastien, Robert's confederate, drove up
to her residence in a cab, and on being admitted to her
presence announced that he came with an invitation
to spend the day with her son-in-law. Madame eagerly
accepted, for the three meals at his expense would enable
her to add at least a franc to her store.</p>
<p>On the journey to the Rue Vaugirard the widow
commented on the fact that her strange companion
held a coil of rope in his hands.</p>
<p>"Yes," he said, with an impudent grin, "I bought
it for a special job. I hope it will prove strong
enough."</p>
<p>Again he grinned meaningly; but the old woman
was, of course, unconscious of the fact that the "special
job" he referred to was her murder by strangulation.</p>
<p>The cab stopped outside the gate at the end of the
garden and some distance from the house. With remarkable
agility Madame Houet descended, and when
Bastien had opened the entrance to the garden passed
in. She had not proceeded a dozen paces, however,
nor had she had time to notice the newly-made grave,
when two strong hands shot out and gripped her by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</SPAN></span>
the throat, and before she could utter a sound Bastien's
rope was around her neck, and she was swiftly strangled.
The next ten minutes was spent by the men filling in
the grave, and when that task was over they adjourned
to the house and steadied their nerves by imbibing
copious draughts of wine.</p>
<p>"The fortune is mine!" Robert cried exultingly.
"Bastien, my friend, we have nothing to fear. You
have only to keep your mouth shut, and the police are
helpless, and ten years hence, even if they discover
proofs of our guilt, they won't be able to touch us.
That is the law of France. A murderer must be convicted
within ten years of the last arrest for the crime
or else he goes free without any penalty."</p>
<p>"And the money?" asked Bastien sharply.</p>
<p>"I have been told that it takes about a month to
wind up the affairs of a dead woman," said the ex-wine
merchant. "My wife will have her mother's
fortune by then. Call four weeks from to-day and I
will hand you your well-earned reward."</p>
<p>They shook hands on it and parted. Nothing remained
except to wait, and that was easy enough.</p>
<p>The instant Madame Houet was missed her son was
arrested. On the face of it there seemed to be every
justification for that procedure, and the detectives
felt that they had the murderer in their power. That
the widow had been murdered they had no doubt,
and it was only when they were searching for her body
that they arrested Robert and Bastien. Following
the capture of the latter the son was released, it being
admitted that he could have had nothing to do with
the disappearance of his mother. It was, however,
quite another matter to find the corpse. Madame
Houet had simply vanished, and, although the detectives
built up a strong case against the two accused, they
were compelled to release them because they were
unable to produce the body.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</SPAN></span>
It was proved that Bastien had called for the widow
and had driven away with her, and it was known that
he had fetched her at the instigation of Robert. The
two men agreed that they had seen Madame Houet
on the day of her disappearance, but swore that she
had left them with the intention of going home. The
cleverest members of the detective force traced the
men's movements on the fatal day, but failed to discover
the garden in the Rue Vaugirard, for Robert had,
of course, never gone near it since the hasty burial,
and, apparently, there was no one to give information
to the police about the strange man who had paid the
rent for it for a month and had not occupied it for more
than a day and that day September 13th, 1821.</p>
<p>When Robert and his confederate walked out of their
cells they entered a café and had lunch, and they confined
their conversation to denunciations of the authorities
for having kept them in gaol so long. Before
they separated, however, Robert fixed an appointment
with his fellow-assassin to call for the twenty thousand
francs and they went their way, animated by feelings
of triumph, the ex-wine merchant, especially, scarcely
able to suppress his joy.</p>
<p>There is a well-known proverb which says that "A
little learning is a dangerous thing," and Robert, the
murderer, discovered its truth when he sent his wife
to claim half her mother's fortune. He had carefully
studied the laws relating to murder, and, confident
that the police would never find Madame Houet's
body, he had willingly accepted the inconveniences
of being constantly under suspicion because he
believed that the ten years required by the law would
soon pass and place him beyond danger. After the
tenth year if the corpse and his guilt were brought to
light he would not be prosecuted. It was a curious
regulation, but it just suited Robert, and he hummed
gaily to himself while awaiting his wife's return.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</SPAN></span>
She came back with a long face and whispered the
bad news.</p>
<p>"The gentlemen in the Government office told me,"
she said, between her tears of disappointment, "that
under the law they cannot distribute my mother's
money until ten years have passed, when, if her body
isn't found, she becomes legally dead. At present,
according to the law, she is considered to be alive, and,
therefore, her estate cannot be touched."</p>
<p>The ex-wine merchant nearly collapsed, and it was
some time before he induced his wife to complain that
she was practically destitute and extract an allowance
of thirty francs a week on account from the State.
For that she had to sign a bond guaranteeing to repay
the money to her mother if the latter should appear on
the scene again.</p>
<p>By dint of desperate appeals to relatives Robert
succeeded in getting the money to take up the forged
bill, but he had now another danger to face—Bastien,
the jobbing carpenter, who, he knew, would make a
terrible row when told of the failure to get hold of the
widow's money.</p>
<p>The carpenter came with an expectant expression,
and left infuriated. Vainly had Robert explained.
Bastien bluntly informed him that he did not believe
a word.</p>
<p>"You are trying to defraud me!" he had shrieked,
shaking his fist and sending Madame Robert into hysterics.
"I will be even with you yet, and if to-morrow
you have not the money ready, I—" He ceased
abruptly and shuffled out of the house.</p>
<p>He did not come back for a fortnight. Then ensued
a repetition of the first scene, terminated by Robert
handing him two hundred and fifty francs.</p>
<p>It was a couple of months before Bastien believed
his explanation of his poverty, but the two murderers
continued to quarrel whenever they met. Robert was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</SPAN></span>
again hopelessly in debt, and could hardly raise a few
francs to give to his fellow-assassin, who was blackmailing
him daily. Eventually things became so bad
that Bastien in desperation committed a burglary for
which he was arrested and sent to penal servitude for
seven years.</p>
<p>Then fresh information reached the authorities and
Robert was arrested again, whilst Bastien was brought
from prison and taken with the ex-wine merchant
before the magistrate. They were severely examined,
but despite many contradictions and lies they had to
be discharged again, Bastien returning to gaol, and
Robert to the miserable rooms he called his home.
This second arrest, however, meant that still ten years
would have to elapse before Madame Houet was considered
dead in law and her assassins free from
punishment.</p>
<p>When Bastien had served his sentence for burglary
he began to blackmail Robert systematically, until
another robbery landed him in gaol again. As the years
went by he grew jealous of the liberty enjoyed by Robert,
and, becoming garrulous, eventually confided in an old
convict with whom he worked exactly nine years and
eight months from the day of his second arrest. His
fellow-prisoner had twelve years to serve, and was,
accordingly, not to be feared, but the very week he
heard Bastien's story of the tragedy in the Rue Vaugirard
he saved a warder's life by an act of bravery,
and was rewarded by a free pardon in March, 1833.</p>
<p>The pardon, however, did not include employment,
and the ex-convict found the world hard and unsympathetic.
No one would have anything to do with a
man whose record included a murder and several violent
assaults, and he was starving when it occurred to him
that he might be able to make something out of Bastien's
confession. He, thereupon, called on the chief of
police, and offered to tell him where the body of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</SPAN></span>
widow was provided he was given five hundred francs
when his statement had been tested.</p>
<p>The chief willingly promised the sum mentioned,
for it was a continual source of exasperation to him
that two such villains as Robert and Bastien should
have outwitted him and his legion of trained detectives.</p>
<p>The ex-convict recounted what Bastien had told him,
and for the third time Robert and Bastien were charged
together. They were not so confident now, for something
seemed to tell them that they were not going to
escape again.</p>
<p>It is the French custom to have the accused present
at any important discovery bearing upon their case,
and Robert and Bastien were, accordingly, handcuffed
and taken to the garden at the back of the house in the
Rue Vaugirard. Half a dozen detectives were provided
with spades, and, whilst the prisoners looked on,
they dug as if for their lives. But they met with no
reward, and Robert, who had remained motionless
throughout, was regarding them with a sneering smile
when one of the detectives suddenly turned on him.</p>
<p>"Get out of the way, man!" he cried contemptuously.
"One would think that the widow Houet had
gripped you by the feet."</p>
<p>On hearing this Robert started as though he had
been shot, and it did not surprise the officials in the
least when the skeleton of the murdered woman was
found exactly under the spot where he had been standing.
It was plain that he had hoped to keep the officers
away from it and that his ruse would cause them to
leave the garden without the corpse. Had they done
so, he and Bastien would have had to be released.</p>
<p>The skeleton was in an almost perfect state of preservation
and there was not the slightest difficulty in
identifying it, for the rope was still around the neck and
on one of the fingers of the left hand was a gold ring.</p>
<p>The ex-wine merchant and his confederate were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</SPAN></span>
tried before the Paris Criminal Court and found guilty
of murder. For some extraordinary reason, however,
the jury added "extenuating circumstances" to their
verdict and this took away from the judge the power
to inflict death. They were, however, consigned to a
living death in one of the French convict settlements,
and there they existed for a few miserable years before
dying of inanition, overwork, and monotony.</p>
<p>Practically the whole of Madame Houet's fortune
was inherited by her son, who died in an asylum, and
eventually the money which had been the motive for
a terrible crime passed into the coffers of the state,
the widow's son leaving no heirs.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</SPAN></span></p>
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