<h2 class="vspace"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead">MADAME GUERIN, MATRIMONIAL AGENT</span></h2>
<p class="drop-cap4"><span class="smcap1">There</span> have been many matrimonial agency
swindlers, but when Madame Guerin, the
plump little Frenchwoman with the pleasant
and engaging manner, entered that "profession" she
introduced new methods into that old form of fraud.
She did not hanker after a lot of clients, preferring to
find a nice, gullible man with money, scientifically
relieve him of it, and then pass on to the next. Her
career proved short and exciting, and only by an accident
did it fail to wind up with a tragedy. But that was
not her fault, for she showed that to obtain a fortune
she was capable of running any risk.</p>
<p>It was at Versailles, in the shadow of the old palace,
that Madame Guerin, with the assistance of a friend,
who was known as Cesbron, but who was really her
husband, started her matrimonial agency.</p>
<p>It was no ordinary affair worked from a cheap suite
of offices with all the usual appliances of a modern
business. Madame Guerin could not be as sordid as
that. She was human and sympathetic, and her personality
was electric. She had reached that time of
life when men found her society agreeable, because a
flirtation could not be taken seriously by her. She
let them understand that she knew that most men
wanted young and pretty wives with fortunes, and
that she was in a position to help them to find their
ideal.</p>
<p>Her "business premises" took the shape of a pleasant,
secluded Villa, beautifully furnished and delightfully<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</SPAN></span>
managed. It was an honour to be invited to an intimate
little dinner at her home, and her invitations were very
seldom declined. When it was tactfully whispered
that the fair tenant was in the habit of bringing very
eligible girls and handsome bachelors together, she
quickly found the sort of clients she required.</p>
<p>One of her first victims was a man of good family,
who held a remunerative Government post. He was
just the type of man who would rather die than enter
into negotiations with the average matrimonial agent,
but over a recherché meal at the Villa there seemed to
be no loss of dignity in half-carelessly discussing his
desire to marry a girl of beauty and fortune.</p>
<p>It was then that Madame Guerin revealed talents
of a high order as a swindler. She never lost her pose
of the smart society woman who was entertaining a
friend and talking about his future amid the soft lights
and the restful furniture.</p>
<p>When the Government official mentioned that he
had about three hundred a year in addition to his salary
of about the same amount, Madame Guerin decided
that there must be a way of separating him from some
of his fortune by persuading him that she was going
to add to it.</p>
<p>"I know a very pretty girl," she said languidly,
"a dear girl, too, and one who is anxious to marry.
She is an orphan, and is bothered by fortune-hunters.
She would like to become a gentleman's wife, and as she
has five thousand a year derived from first-class securities,
it seems to me, my friend, that she would just
about suit you."</p>
<p>Five thousand a year! It made his mouth water.</p>
<p>"Where can I meet this delightful lady?" he asked
anxiously.</p>
<p>"As she is my dearest friend I could invite her here,"
she answered, after a moment's pause. "Her name
is Miss Northcliffe."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</SPAN></span>
"She is English then?" said the official, but there
was no disapproval in his tone.</p>
<p>"Her mother was French," said Madame Guerin,
who had all the time been watching his face. "Her
father was an eminent doctor in London. Miss Northcliffe
loves France, and she has often told me she would
love to be married to a Frenchman and live all her
life in Paris."</p>
<p>The bait took, for the fish rose to it greedily. Thereupon
Madame Guerin, feeling she had "landed" him,
dropped her pose as hostess and became a matrimonial
agent. Of course her expenses would be heavy in
connection with the visit of Miss Northcliffe. She
would have to furnish a suite of rooms specially for the
great English heiress. Then, as he would gain five
thousand pounds a year by the introduction, it would
not be out of place if he paid something in advance.
Madame Guerin guaranteed success, and so forth.
He believed every word.</p>
<p>"You and my dear girl friend will be thrown together
for days," she said, in a confidential tone. "I'll invite
no one else here, and it'll be your own fault if you don't
win her. But you must send me one of your photographs
to-night, and I will show it to her the moment
she arrives. She is a very impressionable, impulsive
girl, and I am certain she will fall in love with your
picture."</p>
<p>Most men will believe a woman's flattery, and in the
case of this French official he swallowed Madame Guerin's
with avidity. It seemed to him he was on the road
to riches, and he scarcely hesitated to send not only
the photograph but a preliminary fee of a hundred
pounds.</p>
<p>If he was disturbed by doubts during the succeeding
days, they were set at rest when an invitation arrived
to meet Miss Northcliffe at dinner at the cosy Villa.
He was, as he admitted afterwards, almost crazy with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</SPAN></span>
delight. The heiress was a reality. Madame Guerin
had not been "pulling his leg" after all. Had she
asked him for a thousand pounds there and then he
would probably have paid it without a murmur.</p>
<p>The dinner was a brilliant success from start to
finish. Never before had he met such a charming,
unaffected girl. A typical English beauty with fair
hair, a peach-like skin and dark grey eyes, who dressed
exquisitely, and spoke French with a fascinating accent.
Her reserve, too, was perfectly enchanting. She did
not gush or chatter, and during the greater part of the
dinner she hardly uttered a word, but towards the end
she became animated.</p>
<p>"She said she would wait until she had made up
her mind about you before becoming friendly," whispered
Madame Guerin at the first opportunity.</p>
<p>He thrilled with pleasure and turned to resume his
conversation with Miss Northcliffe; and when he left
the Villa close on midnight his brain was in a whirl.</p>
<p>Miss Northcliffe had plainly shown her preference
for him, and he was in love with her. He was an expert
on old engravings and modern poetry, and she had,
wonderful to relate, revealed a knowledge of those two
subjects which, though not profound, proved that she
would be an ideal collaborator when they were married.</p>
<p>And then her dress! It was a dream, an exquisite
creation that might have been made out of angels'
wings. The pearl necklace the English heiress had worn
was worth twenty thousand pounds. At least, Madame
Guerin said so, and she ought to know, because she
had some famous pearls herself. He lay awake most
of the night exulting over his good fortune, and early
the following morning rushed off to Versailles to take
Miss Northcliffe for a motor drive.</p>
<p>A week later Madame Guerin suggested that he
should propose, but she warned him that the girl was
suspicious of fortune-hunters and that he must prove<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</SPAN></span>
to her that he was not a needy vagabond marrying
to be kept.</p>
<p>He laughed at the notion, but he took it seriously
all the same, and when Miss Northcliffe modestly and
blushingly accepted his offer of marriage he impulsively
asked to be tested as to his means.</p>
<p>But Miss Northcliffe preferred to leave that to her
dear friend and guardian, Madame Guerin, and the
latter thereupon suggested that he should realize a
couple of thousand pounds and settle it right away on
Miss Northcliffe, who was, of course, equally willing
to supply evidence that her fortune was not a myth.</p>
<p>The infatuated man declined to doubt his fiancée
for a moment, and the two thousand pounds were in
the possession of Madame Guerin two days later. She
received the money with a congratulatory smile, and
told him to call again the following Sunday and fix the
date for the wedding.</p>
<p>There were four days to Sunday, and how he passed
them he never knew. Certainly he was a very inefficient
public servant during that time, for his mind was
concentrated on the beauty and fortune of the lovely
English girl who was about to become his wife. When
Sunday came round he was up at dawn, and two hours
before he was due to start for Versailles he was hatted
and gloved.</p>
<p>The Villa looked very inviting as he walked up to it
and pulled the old-fashioned bell. A long pause ensued,
and then the fat cook opened the door and breathlessly
informed him that Madame was resting in her room
but would be down in a few minutes. He expressed his
regrets, but when he was in the drawing-room he began
to feel that there was something wrong. The atmosphere
depressed him, and he had to reprove himself
audibly for being morbid to prevent a fit of pessimism
overwhelming him.</p>
<p>He was staring through the window when Madame<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</SPAN></span>
Guerin entered, very pale and dabbing at her eyes with
a handkerchief. In great alarm he rushed to her side.
What had happened? Where was Miss Northcliffe?
Was she ill? A dozen questions tumbled over one
another, and all the time the plump little widow tried
to control her sobs.</p>
<p>"Oh, monsieur," she exclaimed, with a piteous
expression, "how shall I break the news? I am distracted,
desolate! Miss Northcliffe—she has gone—disappeared.
I know not where. She may be kidnapped
or she may have run away. I am too distracted
to be able to think. It is all dreadful and—" A flood
of tears completed the sentence.</p>
<p>In vain he implored her to tell him plainly what had
happened. The result was that he left the Villa aware
that he had lost his two thousand pounds and dimly
suspicious of Madame Guerin, although she had sworn
that Miss Northcliffe had taken away every penny of
it, and, indeed, owed a goodly sum to her.</p>
<p>Further reflection convinced him that he had been
swindled, and he began to think of appealing to the
police, but at forty-five one does not do things in a
hurry, and he was not the person to court ridicule.
He had walked into the trap open-eyed, and if his colleagues
in the Government service heard the story of
the "English heiress" they would make his life a misery
with their vulgar chaff. So beyond another visit to
the Versailles Villa to inquire if Miss Northcliffe had
returned he took no steps to recover his losses.</p>
<p>The next exploit was even more subtle. Some one
introduced a well-to-do Parisian of the name of Lalère
to Madame Guerin along with the information that
he was on the look-out for a wealthy wife. As Monsieur
Lalère had a comfortable bank balance of his own she
enthusiastically agreed to provide him with a bride,
and when she learnt that he was partial to an English
girl her delight was boundless.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</SPAN></span>
On this occasion the Versailles Villa was not utilized
as the stage for the little comedy. She decided to vary
her methods, and she started by going to London and
putting up at a fashionable hotel. The two thousand
pounds extracted from the Government official came
in very handy, as even in London one can live quite a
long time in an expensive hotel on that amount.</p>
<p>Shortly after her arrival Lalère came at her invitation.
Madame Guerin was, of course, fashionably
dressed and apparently busy all day calling upon the
leading members of the English aristocracy. She could
not give him more than a few minutes one afternoon,
and when he expressed disappointment she promised
to do her best when she had fulfilled her social obligations.
She mentioned glibly that she was dining that night
with Mrs. Asquith, whose husband was then Chancellor
of the Exchequer, and that the day after she was lunching
with "the Crewes."</p>
<p>The Frenchman was greatly impressed by these lies,
and he therefore appreciated all the more her spontaneous
invitation to him to accompany her to the opera the
following Monday evening. It seemed that a friend
of hers had been called out of town and that her stall
was vacant. Madame Guerin added that she hoped to
be able to introduce Lalère to some English heiresses
between the acts.</p>
<p>Monday night found Madame Guerin and Monsieur
Lalère seated in the stalls at the Covent Garden Theatre.
Just before the curtain went up the woman indicated
a private box wherein three young ladies, beautifully
dressed, were sitting.</p>
<p>"Three friends of mine and all rich, monsieur," she
said confidentially. "You can have your choice. Let
me know the one you prefer. They will be guided
entirely by my advice."</p>
<p>Of course after that Lalère had no eyes for the stage,
and some of the greatest singers in the world failed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</SPAN></span>
to engage his attention. His eyes were always wandering
to the box where the three English beauties were,
and he studied their appearances carefully. Eventually
his choice alighted upon the girl in the centre, whose
name was, Madame Guerin informed him, Miss Northcliffe.</p>
<p>Thus once more the mysterious Miss Northcliffe
appeared on the scene, and again she found a Frenchman
who was mesmerized by her beauty and her reputed
fortune. All the acting that night at Covent Garden
was not behind the footlights. Both Madame Guerin
and Miss Northcliffe could have given points to many
of the professionals.</p>
<p>That the girl who acted as the matrimonial agent's
decoy was clever and educated there can be no doubt.
She could speak French fluently, and she had a first-rate
knowledge of the world. She had been able to
talk intelligently to the authority on old engravings
and modern poetry, and now she charmed Lalère by
her acquaintance with the subjects that interested him.</p>
<p>The sequel was that Lalère paid Madame Guerin
fifteen hundred pounds on the understanding that she
was to bring about a match between himself and Miss
Northcliffe. But no sooner had he parted with the
money than the "heiress" vanished, greatly to Madame
Guerin's distress and Lalère's annoyance; and all he
had to show for his expenditure was a cynical and bitter
contempt for women-folk in general.</p>
<p>Success made Madame Guerin avaricious. She began
to crave for a large fortune, and she believed that she
was clever enough to gain it at one stroke. Experience
had proved that it was easy enough to open a man's
purse with a story of a rich bride, and her victims took
their disappointment so calmly that there was no danger
of retribution. Perhaps the sight of wealthy London
fired her imagination. Anyhow, she immediately began
to look round for a suitable dupe there.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</SPAN></span>
It was, however, necessary to have her husband's
help. As she pretended to be a widow, she called him
her friend, and it was as Monsieur Cesbron that she
introduced him to her friends and acquaintances. Hitherto
Cesbron had wisely kept in the background, an
admiring spectator from afar of his wife's astuteness,
and no doubt he shared in the little windfalls from the
Government official and Lalère.</p>
<p>He was not averse to taking a leading part in the
next big swindle, and it was Cesbron who found the
very man for their purpose. Through a friend he had
heard that in the West End of London there was a doctor
who had saved a considerable sum of money, and who
was in every way a very eligible bachelor.</p>
<p>The initial difficulty was how to make themselves
known to him, but Madame Guerin solved the problem
by planning a pretty little scheme. She might have
called on the doctor in the guise of a patient, but she
decided not to do this lest he discovered there was nothing
the matter with her.</p>
<p>Her final plan was to pretend that she had invented
a new method of sterilizing milk, and that she wished
to have a doctor's opinion of its merits.</p>
<p>Madame Guerin underrated her abilities, for, as events
proved, she need not have bothered about the "invention."
The doctor was pleased to make the
acquaintance of the charming widow, and she soon had
every opportunity for dragging in references to her
rich young lady friends who were anxious to find
husbands.</p>
<p>The medical man was incredulous at first, then curious,
and eventually impressed. Madame Guerin did not
look like a swindler or talk in the manner of a professional
matrimonial agent. She was too human for that, and
there was nothing of the hard-headed business woman
about her.</p>
<p>The doctor readily agreed to join her at a dinner-<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</SPAN></span>party
and meet the young heiresses, and choose which
of them he would care to marry.</p>
<p>The meeting took place at an hotel, and on this occasion
Miss Northcliffe failed to win his approval. A young
lady whose name was given as Miss Smith gained his vote.</p>
<p>Miss Smith was a beauty, vivacious, clever, and
fascinating. When he was persuaded to believe that
she had a large fortune, the doctor considered himself
the luckiest man in the world.</p>
<p>The girl, one of Madame Guerin's cutest confederates,
was equally as good an actress as Miss Northcliffe,
and, shrewd man of the world as the doctor was, she
had no difficulty in persuading him that he had captured
her maiden fancy.</p>
<p>Now, as I have said, the doctor was not a penniless
adventurer. He was a prosperous professional man,
with a good position and a consoling balance at his
bankers, the <i>Crédit Lyonnais</i>. Apart from the somewhat
unconventional means by which they had become
acquainted, the engagement was, on the surface, nothing
remarkable. Miss Smith was obviously well educated,
and fit to preside over the doctor's home. They were,
therefore, of equal social position.</p>
<p>Madame Guerin was, of course, the brains of the
affair, and only the "spade work" was left to her
husband. It was she who decided when she and Miss
Smith should leave London on the plea that they had
to keep engagements in France, and it was she who
instructed Miss Smith to agree to her fiancé's request
that she should name the day.</p>
<p>The two women left for Paris the day before Cesbron,
but they only stopped a day at the capital before they
proceeded to the Villa the swindler had rented in the
vicinity of Fontainebleau. It was situated in a very
lonely spot, and Madame Guerin and Cesbron had taken
it because they had decided to murder the doctor and
obtain his fortune.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</SPAN></span>
They had already endeavoured to get the doctor to
transfer his account to the Paris bank which they said
looked after Miss Smith's immense fortune; but he
declined to effect the change. However, they were
not disheartened. If they were equal to killing the
doctor they were also capable of forging a claim to his
money at the <i>Crédit Lyonnais</i>.</p>
<p>The marriage was fixed to take place in the second
week in November, 1906, and early in the same month
Madame Guerin invited the doctor to spend a few days
at her Villa before he became the husband of the heiress.
He was very busy just then, but, of course, he was most
anxious to see his friends, and he accepted the invitation,
and in due course arrived at the isolated house.</p>
<p>If he had not been absorbed in his forthcoming marriage,
the doctor would hardly have found the place
attractive at that time of the year. Of course, Madame
Guerin was always interesting, and she was a perfect
hostess. There were good points about her friend
Cesbron, too, and, with the excitement of the engagement,
the flattery of his hostess, and the attentions of
Cesbron, the doctor was never dull.</p>
<p>He could never be expected to believe that the woman
with the plump, smiling face and the sympathetic eyes had
planned his murder, or that Cesbron, her husband, was
merely waiting for the proper moment to "remove" him.</p>
<p>One afternoon Madame Guerin and the doctor were
chatting in the front room, when Cesbron drove up
in a cart with a huge, iron-bound trunk.</p>
<p>"Is our friend going to be married too?" he asked
jocularly.</p>
<p>Madame Guerin's eyes glinted, but her lips parted
in a smile.</p>
<p>"Oh, he is always buying clothes," she said indifferently,
"and he likes to keep them clean and dry
when travelling. He told me yesterday he had ordered
a new trunk. It is a hobby of his."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</SPAN></span>
The truth was that that trunk had been purchased
to hold the doctor's corpse!</p>
<p>There was quite a little party at the Villa that night,
and all the time the huge box was waiting in the next
room for its victim. The visitor had no suspicion that
anything was wrong. He knew by now that Madame
Guerin would expect a commission for having introduced
him to the great heiress, but he thought none
the less of her for that. Cesbron, too, was respectful
and attentive, and all appeared to be looking forward
with intense satisfaction to the marriage celebration.
Miss Smith was not, of course, at the Villa. She was
now in Paris selecting her trousseau, and her fiancé
had to be content with a charming little love-letter
which came to him every morning.</p>
<p>The day before the one fixed for the tragedy Cesbron
and the doctor happened to be in the little garden,
when the former playfully started a discussion as to
their respective physical conditions, and before long
the two men had agreed to a friendly wrestling match
to see which of them was the stronger.</p>
<p>To Cesbron's surprise and annoyance, he discovered
that the doctor was by far the better of the two. This
put him out, for it meant that he would have to resort
to fire-arms to achieve his object—the murder of the
guest.</p>
<p>Cesbron did not like using a revolver. It made a
lot of noise, and, lonely as the Villa was, there was
always the danger that some one might be passing at
the moment of the crime. However, the risk had to
be taken. He knew now for certain that he was quite
incapable of seizing the doctor by the throat and strangling
him, and that if it came to a fight he would be no
match for his opponent.</p>
<p>On November 9, 1906, the doctor was alone writing
a letter in the drawing-room. The house was very
quiet, and he was under the impression that Madame<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</SPAN></span>
Guerin and Cesbron had gone out. At this time of
the year it was dark at half-past four, and the doctor
wrote leisurely, pausing occasionally to improve a
phrase before committing it to writing.</p>
<p>Suddenly an explosion seemed to take place in the
room, and simultaneously he felt something sting him.
The next moment he knew that a bullet had passed
into his neck behind his left ear, cutting through the
tongue and soft palate, and breaking several teeth.</p>
<p>But the wound was not sufficient to prevent his
rising and confronting Cesbron, who was standing near
the door with a smoking revolver in his hand. Only
for a fraction of a second did the two men pause. Then
the injured man made a dash at Cesbron, who, recalling
his playful encounter of the day before, took to flight,
well aware that he would be helpless if the doctor got
his fingers round his throat.</p>
<p>When Cesbron sped into the darkness the doctor
made his way out of the house and into the garden,
stumbling towards the gate. To his surprise this was
locked. Evidently the conspirators had not forgotten
anything.</p>
<p>There was nothing for him to do now but to try and
climb over the wall, and he succeeded in getting his
head above the top, but immediately it was silhouetted
against the sky another shot was fired, and for the
second time he was hit. He fell back into the garden,
where, thanks to the darkness and the shelter of the
bushes, he was able to remain concealed until the morning,
when he crawled to the police station at Fontainebleau,
and told the story of the attack on him at the
Villa.</p>
<p>The police took the doctor to the local hospital, and
then went in search of Madame Guerin who, when
arrested, thought to avenge herself by swearing that
the doctor was her accomplice. She lied so skilfully
that she persuaded the police to detain him for a time,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</SPAN></span>
but in the long run the truth was discovered, and it
was proved that the doctor was merely another of
her dupes.</p>
<p>A strange feature of the case was the disappearance
of Cesbron. The police and detective force of France
searched for him everywhere, but he was never seen,
and the same lack of success was experienced when the
authorities became anxious to make the acquaintance
of the English heiresses, Miss Smith and Miss Northcliffe.
Not a trace of them could be found, and this
was very fortunate for Madame Guerin, because, when
she was brought up for trial in July, 1907, she could
pose as a poor woman who was being prosecuted whilst
her partners were allowed to go free owing to the incompetence
of the authorities.</p>
<p>The jury took a lenient view of her swindles, ignoring
the charge of attempted murder, because it was undoubtedly
Cesbron who had fired the two shots at the
doctor, and without his presence in the dock it was
impossible to tell exactly what part the female prisoner
took in the final tragedy. But that she was a very
dangerous adventuress and swindler was obvious, and
everybody was surprised when the judge passed sentence
of three years' imprisonment only.</p>
<p>Her face lit up with joy. She had been afraid that
it would have been at least ten years. Three years!
Why, it was worth running such a bogus matrimonial
agency if that was the only punishment.</p>
<p>It is the French custom to sentence any accused
person who fails to answer the charge in person, and
Cesbron was ordered two years' hard labour. He did
not, however, oblige the prosecution by appearing
and undergoing his punishment, and from that day to
this nothing has been seen or heard of him.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</SPAN></span></p>
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