'You did what my master the Doctor told you to do,' he said. 'But I don't believe you cared whether I lived or died. When you had to tuck me up in bed, for instance, you did it with the grossest indifference. Ha! you have improved since that time. Give me some more cake. Never mind cutting it thick. Is that bottle of lemonade for me?'
'You hardly deserve it, Jack, after the way you have spoken of me. Don't you remember,' she added, cautiously leading him back to the point, 'I used to make your lemonade when you were ill?'
Jack persisted in wandering away from the point. 'You are so hungry for compliments,' he objected. 'Haven't I told you that you have improved? Only go on as you are going on now, and I dare say I shall put you next to Mistress in my estimation, one of these days. Let the cork go out with a pop; I like noises of all kinds. Your good health! Is it manners to smack one's lips after lemonade?—it is such good stuff, and there's
'Reminds you of something that happened at Wurzburg?' Madame Fontaine inquired.
'Yes. Wait a bit. I'm going to try how the cake tastes dipped in lemonade. Ha! ha! how it fizzes as I stir it round! Yes; something that happened at Wurzburg, as you say. I asked David about it, the morning he went away. But the coach was waiting for him; and he ran off without saying a word. I call that rude.'
He was still stirring his lemonade with his bit of cake—or he might have seen something in the widow's face that would have startled him. He did look up, when she spoke to him. His sense of hearing was his quickest sense; and he was struck by the sudden change in her voice.
'What did you ask David?'—was all she ventured to say.
Jack still looked at her. 'Anything the matter with you?' he inquired.
'Nothing. What did you ask David?'
'Something I wanted to know.'
'Perhaps
'I shouldn't wonder. No: dipping the cake in lemonade doesn't improve it, and it leaves crumbs in the drink.'
'Throw away that bit of cake, Jack, and have some more.
'May I help myself?'
'Certainly. But you haven't told me yet what you want to know.'
At last he answered directly. 'What I want to know is this,' he said. 'Who poisoned Mr. Keller?'
He was cutting the cake as he spoke, and extracted a piece of candied orange peel with the point of the knife. Once more, the widow's face had escaped observation. She turned away quickly, and occupied herself in mending the fire. In this position, her back was turned towards the table—she could trust herself to speak.
'You are talking nonsense!' she said.
Jack stopped—with the cake half-way to his mouth. Here was a direct attack on his dignity, and he was not disposed to put up with it. 'I never talk nonsense,' he answered sharply.
'You do,' Madame Fontaine rejoined, just as sharply on her side. 'Mr. Keller fell ill, as anyone else might fall ill. Nobody poisoned him.'
Jack got on his legs. For the moment he actually forgot the cake. 'Nobody?' he repeated. 'Tell me this, if you please: Wasn't Mr. Keller cured out of the blue-glass bottle—like me?'
(Who had told him this? Joseph might have told him; Minna might have told him. It was no time for inquiry; the one thing needful was to eradicate the idea from his mind. She answered boldly, 'Quite right, so far'—and waited to see what came of it.)
'Very well,' said Jack, 'Mr. Keller was cured out of the blue-glass bottle, like me. And
She flatly contradicted him again. 'You were
Jack crossed the room, with a flash of the old Bedlam light in his eyes, and confronted her at the fire place. 'The devil is the father of lies,' he said, lifting his hand solemnly. 'No lies! I heard my master the Doctor say I was poisoned.'
She was ready with her answer. 'Your master the Doctor said that to frighten you. He didn't want you to taste his medicines in his absence again. You drank double what any person ought to have drunk, you greedy Jack, when you tasted that pretty violet-colored medicine in your master's workshop. And you had yourself to thank—not poison, when you fell ill.'
Jack looked hard at her. He could reason so far as that he and Mr. Keller must have taken the same poison, because he and Mr. Keller had been cured out of the same bottle. But to premise that he had been made ill by an overdose of medicine, and that Mr. Keller had been made ill in some other way, and then to ask, how two different illnesses could both have been cured by the same remedy—was an effort utterly beyond him. He hung his head sadly, and went back to the table.
'I wish I hadn't asked you about it,' he said. 'You puzzle me horribly.' But for that unendurable sense of perplexity, he would still have doubted and distrusted her as resolutely as ever. As it was, his bewildered mind unconsciously took its refuge in belief. 'If it was medicine,' asked the poor creature vacantly, 'what is the medicine good for?'
At those words, an idea of the devil's own prompting entered Madame Fontaine's mind. Still standing at the fireplace, she turned her head slowly, and looked at the cupboard.
'It's a better remedy even than the blue-glass bottle,' she said; 'it cures you so soon when you are tired, or troubled in your mind, that I have brought it away with me from Wurzburg, to use it for myself.'
Jack's face brightened with a new interest. 'Oh,' he said eagerly, 'do let me see it again!'
She put her hand in her pocket, took out the key, and hesitated at the last moment.