Also at this time she wrote several poems which would not have disgraced the pen of a Heine. Once more we see the basic talent of the girl coming to the fore. Perhaps for a brief period her glandular secretions were functioning normally.
In the asylum she appeared perfectly happy, unrepentant and even proud. The attention paid to her and to her tales flattered her vanity; she genuinely enjoyed being an “interesting case.”
Grete’s trial — or trials, for there were two of them — took place in Freiberg in June. She was first convicted of theft, forgery and incitement to crime in connection with Uncle Kastner’s steel box, and sentenced to five years. Three weeks later she was tried for the murder of Pressler and the forgery of his will.
The result was one of the most thoroughgoing pieces of legalistic absurdity on record. She was found guilty on both counts, and was sentenced in the following ludicrous manner: first, death by beheadal for removing Pressler from this earth; secondly, eight years in jail for forging the will; and thirdly, the perpetual loss of her civil rights!
The fact that Grete with her severed head in a basket, could not conveniently serve the eight years, made not the slightest impression on the judge. And lest she might somehow manage the miracle and later go free in her decapitated condition, he concluded, by some weird and unearthly process of logic peculiar to lawyers, that she should have no civil rights!
The only loophole overlooked by this modern Rhadamanthus was when he omitted to order her to report annually to an officer of the court. Maybe he would have done so had he been acquainted with Ichabod Crane.
The proceedings against Merker were dropped for lack of evidence, and when he stepped out of jail he disappeared completely from the pages of history — Gott sci Dank!
Grete’s last days were passed quietly. She showed neither fear nor compunction. Indeed, she was haughty and cheerful; and her courage held up even under the final ghastly preparations for her death.
On the twenty-third of July, 1908, her scheming blond head fell under the executioner’s knife. (The executioner it seems was partial to blondes.)
A strange and baffling case, Markham. In studying its numerous documents, one is forced to doubt practically everything that concerns Grete herself — except, perhaps, the fact that she murdered Pressler — and even here the motive is obscure. Her impulses, her mentality, her feelings for her parents, for Pressler, for Merker — nothing is wholly certain, for she lied to herself as consistently and vividly as she lied to the world.
In fact, it is problematical whether Grete could ever have been convicted without her own voluntary confession. Nobody could have disproved her first versions of Pressler’s death; and her forgery of Pressler’s will was so cleverly done that his own family acknowledged it to be genuine.
Grete was caught and punished only because of that supreme optimism which characterizes all true egoists. She was unable to keep her triumphs to herself. Her “urge to tell” was irresistible. And this “urge to tell” is the basic impulse of all creative art.
Lionel White
Lionel White didn’t just dabble in true crime; he spent the better part of his writing career in pulp purgatory. During the 1940s, he published Underworld Detective, Detective World, and Homicide Detective, magazines whose tawdry, hyperstylized layouts and unusually violent stories make for astonishing reading even today. In the early 1950s, White turned to fiction. He wrote several straight crime novels, the boldest of which, To Find a Killer, is a book of such brutal rage that it would make Mickey Spillane blush. (“My beautiful wife turned to me in her sleep and softly murmured, ‘Harry— Oh Harry.’ It was right then, in that very second, that I made my decision. Me, Marty Ferris. I decided to kill my wife.”) In the mid-1950s, White began writing caper novels which dealt with the meticulous planning and execution of heists — and in the years that followed, this subgenre would become his own private turf. His best books, Death Takes the Bus, Clean Slate (filmed by Stanley Kubrick as The Killing), and The Big Caper, endure not just because of the ingenuity of the knockovers but because of his ability to bring out his characters’ fears, desires, and fatal flaws. Though his fiction was revered by readers and critics, he never left the world of true crime behind. And he would still crank out an occasional yarn when the mood struck or his creditors knocked. This one, however, appeared back in 1942. It is quintessential White — from the first dark, brooding sentence to the last.
Clue of the Poison Pen
This time he had made the move alone. He couldn’t help but think of this one fact above all the others as he sat there in the small, conventionally furnished apartment at 536 Boulevard in Atlanta, Georgia.
Tall, broad of shoulder and stocky, brown hair already receding and shot with a few gray strands, he was only 26, but already, within these last weeks, Perry M. Williams had aged rapidly. He was a harassed, lonely man — a man who spent his days and nights in a maelstrom of fear and worry.
Across the room from where he sat slumped in a deep upholstered chair, was the dressing table at which Mildred Seymour Williams, his 22-year-old wife, had sat so many mornings during those five years of their marriage. On it were the fragile bottles of perfume, jars of makeup material; the dainty, oddly disjointed French doll which she had loved. And in the polished mirror, where his own image made a shallow reflection in the dim light of the room, he saw nothing but her lovely face as he had seen it so many times in the past. Hers was a slender, oval face with soft brown eyes beneath a curtain of fine auburn hair.
He tried not to think of Mildred. Tried not to think of the past at all. But little things kept coming back like so many shadowed ghosts to haunt him until his tortured mind was a mad kaleidoscopic pattern of the years of their life together.
He had thought this latest move might help, but it really hadn’t at all. And yet he knew he couldn’t have stayed on at the old address where they had last lived together. The house at 640 Mayland Avenue, S.W., from which she had disappeared back on November 21, 1941. Everything in that place had constantly reminded him of her and so he had moved. He hadn’t intended taking her belongings with him at all, but then at the last minute had told the truckman to bring them along. He wanted to see her things, even though he knew to do so was an exquisite torture.
He remembered now how happy they had been when they made the move from the furnished rooms at 1117 Stewart Avenue to the Mayland Avenue apartment. She had loved having her own furniture, their own apartment, their privacy. And now she was gone and he had nothing. Nothing but his memory of her and that was worse than nothing because it was something to remind him constantly of his loss; something to twist and embitter and ravage him.
He was a strong man but was unable to cope with the ruthless disaster which had overtaken him. His friends could give him no help; not even the police could do anything about it.
Worst of all, of course, was the uncertainty, the terror of not knowing where she might be: the agony of mind and heart brought about by the wild and uncontrollable imaginings of a heartsick soul — this was what was wrecking him. She was gone and now he didn’t know where to turn.