Magdalena, who’d always had a strong memory, recited the individual herbs and other ingredients. The hangman nodded, thought for a moment, then replied, “I have melissa, sundew, and most of the other herbs right here. You can get ergot in the apothecary.”
“But I have no money!” Magdalena wailed, burying her face in her hands. “Twenty guilders-where can I get all that money?”
Philipp Hartmann hesitated, then walked over to a chest in the corner and opened it with a key from a chain on his belt. Magdalena listened to the clinking, and when the hangman returned and opened his hand, ten shiny guilders rolled across the table toward her.
“You’ll need this for the apothecary,” Hartmann said. “The rest you can get from me.”
Magdalena looked at him in disbelief. “But…” she started to stay.
Something else rolled across the table toward her-a black, shining ball the size of a child’s fist made from a strange material she had never seen before. She held it in her hand and could hear something rattle inside.
“A bezoar,” the hangman said. “If you ask me, a useless magic thing for superstitious wives. You can keep it; I have no use for it anymore, in any case.”
“I’ll never be able to pay you back,” Magdalena whispered.
The hangman shrugged. “I could give you fifty times as much as a dowry. I’m not a poor church mouse like your father. In a few years, I’ll be able to purchase my citizenship rights, and who knows…” He tried to put on a cheerful face, but his face twisted into a grimace. “Perhaps you’ll think it over some more. I’m not a bad catch, and Barbara urgently needs a mother.” He stood up and walked to the door. “You can sleep here in the main room on the bench. Go to the apothecary tomorrow and then have a look around Augsburg. You’ll see that it’s a not a bad place to live.”
As Magdalena listened to his heavy footsteps going back up the stairs, her stomach sank. She felt as if she had swallowed the bezoar.
The wagon driver lay on a bed of straw and screamed like a stuck pig. Startled, Bonifaz Fronwieser, who had just been tapping his abdomen, withdrew his hand.
“Hmm, so this is where it hurts,” the older physician said, looking at his son apprehensively. Anton Steingadener’s wife knelt alongside the two doctors, wiping sweat from her husband’s brow with one hand, fingering a rosary in the other. Just an hour ago, the elderly couple had arrived at Fronwieser’s house, where several patients had been waiting since noon. Most were suffering from the fever that had been going around Schongau for weeks, but this case, Simon thought, looked even more serious, if that were possible. He was already certain that it was hopeless.
“What’s wrong with him, Herr Doktor?” Agathe Steingadener wailed. “Was it the food? Our bread is not the best, I know. We add milled acorns to the dough because we never have enough flour. But these pains…What is wrong with him?”
“How long has he been like this?” Bonifaz Fronwieser asked, examining Anton Steingadener’s eyes under a magnifying glass. They were dilated and glassy, and the man’s severe pain had driven him half crazy.
“Let’s see…three days, I think,” Agathe Steingadener replied. “Can you help him?”
Bonifaz Fronwieser stepped back, letting his son palpate the man’s abdomen again. It was rock hard and swollen above the pelvis. Simon pressed lightly, and the man screamed again as if he were being impaled on a stake.
“My God, what’s wrong with him? Just what does he have?” shouted Agathe Steingadener, clutching her rosary tightly. “Has the devil taken possession of him, just like he did with the priest in Altenstadt?” She broke out in tears. “Holy Mary, Mother of Jesus! The devil is taking our poor souls and won’t even spare God-fearing citizens and priests! My husband went to mass every third day, and we often prayed together at home-”
“Your husband has a tumor,” Simon replied, interrupting the litany. “It has nothing to do with the devil. But prayer can’t hurt.”
He didn’t tell the woman that prayer was probably the only thing that could still save her husband. Simon knew that such tumors were sometimes removed at big universities, but here, in Schongau, they had neither the knowledge nor the tools to carry out such a complicated operation. Simon cursed as he rummaged through the shelves in the medicine cabinet, looking for some poppy seed extract, and in so doing, he knocked over a few small phials. It would only partially relieve the man’s pain, offering him, at best, a slow decline into unconsciousness. Everything else was in the hands of God.
When Simon finally found the bottle, he noticed something moving behind him. His father’s fingers closed around his wrist.
“Are you crazy?” old Bonifaz Fronwieser hissed in his ear, quietly so the wagon driver’s wife couldn’t hear him. “Do you know how expensive this medicine is? The Steingadener woman will never be able to pay for that!”
“Shall we let her husband die a miserable death like a beast?” Simon whispered in reply. “He’s in great pain; we must help him.”
“Then send him to the hangman,” his father replied, in the same low voice. “Kuisl will give him one of his elixirs, and then it will be over. It’s high time for Lechner to forbid that quack from practicing medicine before he poisons half the town with his herbs and elixirs.”
“Half the town has already been to him, and he’s got more patients than you can ever imagine!” Simon replied in a clear voice.
Taking the phial of poppy seed extract from his father’s hands, he gave it to the Steingadener woman.
“Here, give your husband two spoonfuls of this a day in a glass of wine,” he said in a comforting tone. “The drink won’t make the tumor go away, but at least the pain will be more bearable.”
“Will he get better?” the woman asked anxiously, looking down at her husband. Josef Steingadener seemed to have fallen asleep out of exhaustion. He trembled and twitched, but was otherwise quiet.
Simon shrugged. “Only the Lord knows that. We’ll help you take him home now.”
Bonifaz Fronwieser stared angrily at his son but nevertheless gave him a hand in carrying the heavy wagoner out the door and lifting him into a wagon. Agathe Steingadener gave them a few coins, then sat down in the coachman’s box and drove off. She did not wave good-bye. No doubt she was already wondering how she would make out financially without her husband.
On this day, Simon and his father had three more patients who all came to them with the fever. They were well-to-do citizens, and Bonifaz Fronwieser prescribed them theriac, a wickedly expensive potion made of poppy seed extract and angelica root, which probably wouldn’t help but would at least not make the patients any worse. Simon knew this wasn’t true of all of his father’s medicines.
While the young physician examined the phlegm his patients coughed up and checked their urine, his thoughts kept turning back to the Templars’ treasure. Could it be hidden in Wessobrunn? Or would they find only another riddle there? In any case, though he was deeply troubled by what the abbot of Steingaden had said, he decided to set out with Benedikta the following day. Just what was it Bonenmayr had said at the funeral? “Have you ever asked yourself who would benefit most from Koppmeyer’s death?”
One thing clear was clear to Simon. Even though he could never imagine this happy, enlightened businesswoman poisoning anyone, from now on he’d keep a closer eye on Benedikta.
Simon wished the hangman could come along with them the next day, but Kuisl would have to stay in town to prepare for the upcoming trial. Simon was excited to share with the hangman what they had learned right after the funeral, but Kuisl had been strangely brusque in response, as if he were suddenly no longer interested in solving the riddle. When the physician told him he was departing for Wessobrunn the next day with Benedikta, Kuisl just shook his head.