Inspired picture of a girl facing away, holding a violin, looking at a body on the floor</em>
Elfi Von Croy hurried out of the small concert hall to find her Mother. She was pale, and her deep blue eyes were wide in fear and excitement. “Mama, mama,” she cried when she saw her “Meister Welser says I am to compete in the 18 to 20 year old class!”
“What?!” Marta Von Croy exclaimed. “But Elfi, you are only 13. You have already competed in the 12 to 14 and 15 to 17 classes. And I am so proud of how well you did in both.” Marta smiled at her daughter.
Her younger brother Stefan jumped forward and hugged his sister. “Oh, Elfi, how wonderful! You will do as well in that class as you have in the others, I know you will!”
He stepped back and grinned at her.
“I don’t know,” Elfi said. “I’m afraid to try!”
“Herr Welser said he has arranged it?” her mother asked.
“Yes, mama, he said I am well able to do it. But, oh, mama – competing against the grownups, not girls and boys? He said for me to come and tell you.”
“Yes, I did,” a deep male voice said, and a hand rested on Elfi’s shoulder. “Mein leibchen, I know you can do it. All you have to think about is your violin, and making it sing for you. Forget the others, forget the adjudicators. Remember only yourself and your violin, and you will do very well!” Guenther Welser smiled down at his young protégé then looked at her mother. “Will you give your consent, Frau Von Croy?”
“Yes….yes, I will, but…but I cannot stay with her. I must go with Stefan; he is to compete now in the 7 to 9 clarinet class, then in the 10 to 12 class. It is his first competition, I thought Elfi would be finished and come with us. I do not like to leave her alone.”
“Go, Frau Von Croy, I will look after Elfi. I will keep her with me until this class is over, then we will come and meet you at the other hall. She will be safe.” he turned to Elfi “but leibchen, why do you carry your violin in the wrong hand?” He chuckled at the expression on the little girl’s face.
“Oh, Meister, when you told me, I was putting it away. I just grabbed it and hurried to mama! I was too excited and afraid to notice.” quickly, she took the violin in her left hand, holding it with the bow dangling from her little finger. “There,” she said. “That’s better.” suddenly she looked up at him and grinned. “I’m ready, Meister. And I will do as you said, and think only of my violin and the music.”
“Good girl,” he smiled. “Now we must go.” Marta gave her daughter a swift hug and kiss, and whispered “you will do as well this time as you have always done. I love you.” then, taking Stefan’s hand, she turned and hurried off down the hall. Elfie and Herr Welser turned and walked in the opposite direction.
Elfie did do well – excellently, in fact, winning top honours in all three classes she competed in. Six months later, she was chosen to play at a special recital at Kursalon, the concert hall where the Strauss brothers had performed. It was a very great honour to have the opportunity to play there, and she was both elated and frightened. But then she remembered Herr Welser’s advice at the competition, and the fear lessened.
As Elfi walked out on stage, she kept the Meister’s advice in mind, and tried to ignore the loud applause. Looking straight ahead, she saw the conductor, Dietmar Steindachner standing, watching her, one hand out. There was a welcoming, encouraging smile on his face, and she felt safer, and less nervous. She walked to him, bowed, turned and bowed to the orchestra, and then to the audience.
At the lifting of Herr Steindachner’s baton, the music started. Soon she was playing, and nothing else mattered. She was only vaguely aware of the other musicians, and the conductor’s baton. All of her attention was on the violin, and making it sing, the sound carrying her soul to incredible heights. Then it was over, there was a moment of silence, and then the applause exploded, the wave of sound almost pushing her back a step. Dazed, she acknowledged it, not seeing that she had earned a standing ovation.
Still dazed, she bowed again, turned, and left the stage. In the wings her mother, father and brother were waiting for her, and she was clasped in their arms. The sound of the applause swept over them. Tears ran down Marta’s face. She was so proud of her little girl. Brother and father smiled and fought the tears.
“Och, mein leibchen!” Heinrich Von Cloy said. “You play like an angel! How proud I am of you, and how glad I am that I was able to be here this night, to see and hear you perform!” His work for the government often took him away for weeks at a time, so they were all pleased that he was home for a while.
The next week, when she went to the conservatory for her regular lesson, she was surprised to find Herr Welser’s room empty. She thought she heard voices in the auditorium, so she went there. As she walked in, she was greeted by enthusiastic applause. They were all there – all the students, all the teachers, even the janitorial staff, and they were all smiling and clapping. Hung across the stage was a big sign “Well done, Elfi!”
They all gathered around to shake her hand, hug her, and tell her how pleased and proud they were. She had brought great honour to their school, and it reflected on them all. The rest of the lesson time was filled with talk, laughter, praise, cake and punch. Elfi was stunned by the honour. It was something she treasured always, looking back in later life. That everyone praised and honoured her, freely and without jealousy, was a memory to last a lifetime.
Two years later, when she was 16, she had the honour to play with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra in the Wiener Konzerthaus. Once again, she earned a standing ovation. Three beautiful bouquets were presented to her, one by a famous violinist, one by the Mayor, and the last by her very best friend, Gretel Gusenbauer. She was touched almost to tears by that last one. Smiling, she accepted the flowers and the applause, then bowed and left the stage. Once again her parents and brother were there to greet her, and celebrate her success with her.
“Elfi, my wonderful daughter,” her father said. “Where next will you play?”
“I don’t know, Papa,” Elfi answered. “But I would like to take some time off now. Just practise, continue to see Herr Welser, and get on with my school studies; maybe just a couple of years, so I can finish high school. Then I will be able to go on to University. I would love to play in the Musikverein someday, if that could ever be possible.”
“Then, my love,” her mother said, “that is what you should do. You have come far already, and you deserve the time to work on your academic future, too.”
Happily the family left the hall, content to wait for Elfie’s next big performance. They had no premonition of what that performance would lead to.
Aunt Liesle – part 2
Time passed, and Elfi devoted more of her time to her academic studies. She devoted at least two hours a day to practising her violin, and the rest of the day, what there was left, she walked, or rode her bicycle. She did extremely well in her studies, finding Mathematics as easy as music. She did do concerts, one in the Stiftersaal, or middle hall of Brucknerhaus, in Linz. Before a packed house of 352, at the age of 17, she performed Elgar’s Violin Concerto in B Minor with conductor Helmut Wiedermann. It seemed to her one of the least demanding concerti, but she was pleased with the enthusiastic response, nonetheless.
“Elfi,” Stefan said when she came off stage, “I am so proud of you! It’s great having such a talented sister.” he hugged her, grinning.
“Stefan, I’m not the only one with talent. Look how well you’re doing with your clarinet. You are already in the Youth Symphony Orchestra, and you’re only 12!” she hugged him again, and they went to meet their parents.
At 18, Elfi left home, to go to Mozarteum University in Salzburg, where she continued her music studies as well as the academics. During her first university year, she played Beethoven’s Violin Concerto in D Minor in Jahn’s hall in Vienna, where both he and Mozart had played. It was so thrilling to feel that she was following in such distinguished footsteps! This performance, too, was greeting with a standing ovation, and the personal congratulations of conductor Kurt Koesler. Awed by that, Elfi bowed again, and went offstage to the waiting arms of her family.
“Mama, papa, I am so happy,” she said. “I am doing the things I love best, and I believe I am doing well at both. My councillor has suggested that I take second year courses; he thinks I can finish university at least one year faster. And it won’t interfere with my violin studies!”
“Ach, leibchen,” papa exclaimed. “How did we get such an intelligent, talented daughter? My heart swells with pride when I look at you!”
“Thank you, papa,” Elfi said. “But, papa, don’t forget Stefan. He is just as talented and smart as I am. After all, he is in the Youth Symphony, and several grades above his age level with both the clarinet and piano, and he’s only 13! I didn’t do that well.”
“You are correct, leibchen, your mama and I are proud of both of our children.” he turned to look at Stefan. “Such incredible offspring for two such ordinary people! It is a miracle.” He beamed from one to the other, his face glowing with pride.
Marta watched and smiled. Yes, they had two incredible children and she was as proud as Heinrich. “You both know how proud I am of you,” she said. “And Elfi, if your councillor thinks you can do it, and you feel confident, then go ahead. You are doing so well with your music and academics. When you graduate, you can go for your Master’s, and even a Phd! You can be an astronomer, or a physicist, and a concert violinist as well. And just think, you would be Doctor Elfi Von Croy, astrophysicist and world famous concert violinist! How proud we will be!”
“Yes,” Heinrich said. “And how far will Stefan go? He’s doing so well with his clarinet, and the piano too. And now he brings home a letter from school saying he shows great ability in biology; we could see both of our children become doctors. How amazing!
Time passed, and both Elfi and Stefan did well in their studies. One early spring day, Elfi hurried into the house. “Mama, papa, Stefan, I’m home!” she called out, as she ran into the kitchen.
Her mother looked up from the strudel she was making, surprised to see her daughter. “Elfie!” she exclaimed. “How good to see, you, but what are you doing home now? You still have two months before the term is ended.”
“Mama, I had to come home, and it’s the Easter holiday. Oh, mama, I am so excited! I have been asked to play with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra in the Theater ander Wien, with conductor August Doppelmayer! He’s the second best conductor in Vienna! Meister Ludwig Andritz said I’m to play Paganini’s Violin Concerto number 1, Opus 6, one of the most difficult concertos!”
“Oh, Elfi!” Marta exclaimed. Heedless of her flour covered hands she grasped her daughter in her arms in a fierce hug. “What a great honour! Oh, I am so proud of you!” she stepped back, tears streaming down her face. Raising both hands, she wiped her cheeks.
Elfi burst out laughing. “Oh, mama, now you are like your strudel! And I am all over flour, too.” laughing, she reached for a towel and gave it to her mother. Marta took it and, laughing too, wiped the floury mess off her face, while Elfi brushed at the flour on her coat. Taking it off, she draped it over a chair. They stood and looked at each other, overwhelmed by the honour.
Just then Heinrich and Stefan came in. “Elfi!” Stefan shouted, and rushed to hug his sister. “How great, you are home for Easter!”
Heinrich reached to hug his daughter, too. “Yes, this makes the holy day even better.” he said.
“Wait until you hear her news,” Marta told them. “Tell them Elfi,” she turned to the beaming young woman.
“I haven’t told even you all of it yet, mama,” she grinned. She told her father and brother about the honour accorded her. “But playing in the Theater ander Wien is not all. I am to graduate in June, Summa cum Laude! Professor Klara Boxleitner wants me to do my Master’s right away and my Phd next year. I am almost overwhelmed by it all.” she looked at her family, waiting for their reaction. Of course, it was happy and enthusiastic.
After the concert, Herr Pauli Rudel, the premier conductor in Europe, came backstage to speak to her. “Miss Von Croy, I am very impressed by your mastery of such a difficult piece. This coming August, there will be several special performances in the Musikverein. I would like you to play Tchaikovdky’s Concerto in D Major for the night of August 15th. Would you be interested?”
Elfi stared at him, stunned by this sudden honour. “Truly? You want me to play there? Oh, Herr Rudel, it is a dream come true!”
He smiled and held out his hand. “It is a date, then,” he said. “The Golden Hall, on August 15th.”
She nodded, gulped, smiled and agreed. On the night, she wore a new white silk gown, with her hair up, intricately braided and wound like a gleaming dark crown. The hall was full, not just all of the 1,744 seats, but all of the standing room spaces as well. She was nervous, but then she remembered what Herr Welser had told her all those years ago, when she performed before an audience for the first time. Think only of the music and the violin, and make it sing. Once again the performance was perfect, although this was the concerto that was pronounced unplayable when Tchaikovsky wrote it.
She took her bows, raised a hand to indicate the conductor then the orchestra, and the applause grew. Finally, it died down, and she was presented with several bouquets, which she accepted with a smile. Then, bowing again, she walked off stage. She had noticed an area in the hall to the dressing rooms that was very cold. As she approached it now, almost floating in the afterglow of her performance, she was surprised to see someone lying on the floor. As she neared, she saw that it was a young woman, dressed in white, with dark hair. Then she realised that she could faintly see the floor through the figure.
She stopped, stunned. It looked a lot like her! Was this an omen? Then she became aware of a whispering sound, and the feeling that someone was standing beside her. The whispering became louder, and she heard “Elfi, please, you are the only one who can hear me. Please help me. I was murdered here, and the murderer was never caught. It was not the woman they arrested. I was ….” the voice faded, as did the body. Elfi stood, caught by the horror of that voice, its message, and the body she had seen. Who was it? And why was she the only one who could help?
Aunt Liesle part 3
Elfie stood, stunned and shaken by what had just happened. Was it real? It couldn’t have been, yet why would she imagine such a thing? No, it was just her mind playing tricks, overwrought by the excitement and strain of the performance. Get hold of yourself, Elfie, she told herself, giving her shoulders a little shake. Lifting her head, she took a step forward, only to be stopped again. This time, she saw nothing, but felt a presence beside her, and a faint touch on her arm. Again, the faint whisper “help me, please. Until my killer is brought to justice, my soul cannot rest.” Then it was gone, and she was standing there, shaking, unable to move.
“Miss Von Croy”, a voice said, and a white haired woman stepped to her side. “Why, whatever is wrong? You are as white as your gown!” The woman put her arm around Elfie’s shoulders. “And you are shaking like a leaf. Come, dear, let me get you to your dressing room.” The woman’s arm pressed lightly on Elfie’s shoulders, urging her forward. Soon she was seated in the dressing room, becoming more aware of her surroundings, and looked up to see Analiese Dorfmeister in front of her, looking worried and holding out a glass of water. “Frau Dorfmeister, thank you.” She took the glass, took a sip, and sighed.
“Frau Dorfmeister, did something happen back there, where you found me?” Elfie looked at the woman anxiously.
“Yes, but how could you know?” Analiese asked.
“What happened? Please tell me. I…I…felt something, heard something, I need to know, did I imagine it?”
“All right, dear. No, it wasn’t your imagination. It happened thirty years ago. Liesl Henninger was a coloratura soprano, one of the best in the world. She had just finished a rehearsal for a performance, and had gone to her dressing room. I was assistant dresser then. When I went to help her change, she wasn’t there. Then I heard a scream, and when I ran out, Ingrid Erstweiler was standing staring at something on the floor, shrieking. She was also a soprano, not quite as good a Liesl. When I got there, several others were there, and I saw it was Liesl. Someone felt for a pulse, and said she was dead. The police came, and arrested Ingrid, but had to let her go, as she had been with the concert meister until just before everyone heard the scream. They never found the killer.”
“I see. Thanks, Frau Dorfmeister. I still don’t understand, but I saw her, and heard her. She said I was the only one who could help her.” Elfie shook her head. “I don’t know why, or what I can do. But she said she is held here until her killer is caught.”
“Perhaps you should talk to Ludwig Zingler. He was the main detective on the case, and he has never given up. He comes back every year, on the anniversary, talking to those of us who are still here. If she spoke to you, perhaps she will again, and it could be that she knows who did it. He will do anything he can, and solving the case would be the biggest satisfaction of his life. I can give you his address if you want to talk to him. He’s retired now, but this he will not give up.”
“Yes, please, Frau Dorfmeister. I feel I must do what I can. I still don’t know why I’ve been chosen, but I think I will find that out soon.” Elfie stood up and started to gather her things. Soon she was on her way out, to find Stefan at the stage door, waiting to take her home.
“Elfi, what’s wrong? You are white as a ghost!” he put his arm around her shoulders. “And you are shaking! Did something go wrong with the performance? We were there, and it seemed perfect to us.”
“No, Stefan, all went well. It’s something else. I’ll tell you and mama a papa, when we get home. Just please, let’s go.”
His arm still around her, Stefan walked her to the auto, helped her in and went to the driver’s side. Soon they were on the way, and twenty minutes later, they were seated in the living room. Elfi took a deep breath, and told them all the story of what had happened to upset her so. When she mentioned Liesl she saw her mother go dead white. She looked as though she was going to faint.
“Marta,” Heinrich said as he wrapped his arms around her. “It is hard, I know, hearing that name again after so many years.” he held her until her colour came back, and she lifted her head.
“Mama, what is wrong?” Elfi cried. “What have I said to upset you so? Who was Liesl Henninger?”
Marta took a deep breath, and looked at Heinrich. “Tell them, my dear,” he said, “Elfi at least should know. And there is no shame in it; just much sadness and heartache.” He clasped her hand and smiled at her. Marta turned to the children, paused, and said “Elfi Liesl Henninger was my favourite, beloved Aunt. I was eleven when she was killed, and I was devastated. She had been coaching me, along with my voice teacher, and with her death I lost all interest in singing. When my first child was a girl, I honoured her with the name. But I could not call you Liesl that was just more than I could bear. Perhaps, though, that and the fact that you are so like her, is the reason why she has been able to contact you. I think you should go to that detective and talk to him. Perhaps, if you can bring yourself to seek her out, she will be able to give you a clue, and her killer will, at last, pay for his crime.”
Heinrich nodded. “Yes, Elfi, I agree, if you will not be too upset. You were very pale and shaken when you got home, and we would not want you to do anything that might frighten you.”
Elfi sat quietly, feeling better now she had talked to her parents. For several minutes she thought about the experience, and realised that although it had been frightening, she had never felt in danger. And perhaps mama needed a resolution to the mystery as much as Aunt Liesl did. She looked around at the family and nodded.
“Yes, I can do it, and I want to. For mama’s sake as well as Aunt Liesl’s, it’s time to bring the killer to justice, if he is still alive. At least, we should know who it was. But, would you both come with me to see Herr Zingler?”
“Of course we will,” Heinrich said. “We can call in the morning, and see if we can talk to him in the afternoon.” They all agreed, and soon were asleep. Elfi said a special prayer for the Grand Aunt she had never known, and, at peace again, drifted off reliving her success.
Ludwig Zingler was still a big man, six feet six inches, and in remarkable condition for a man in his seventies. He greeted them pleasantly and invited them into his study, seeing to their comfort before getting down to the reason for the visit. He was stunned when Elfi told her story.
“I have never given up on that case,” he said. “I have copies of everything we found out here, and as often as I go over it, I still cannot find an answer. Young lady, if you are willing to spend time backstage at the Musikverein, perhaps at last I can find some peace. I heard Miss Henninger sing many times, and I was deeply in love with her. The night she died, I had seen her before the performance, and she had accepted my proposal. My heart died with her, and so I never married. Do you think you can do it?”
They were all stunned at his news, and Elfi nodded. “Yes, Herr Zingler, I can do it. There is no danger for me there. It was just the shock of seeing her body, and hearing her voice that upset me. Now I know I can see and hear her, and remain calm. We must do all we can to give her peace; and you, too. When will we go?”
“It is only half past two, why not now? I am quite anxious to try. I know there must have been a clue we missed, and perhaps she can tell you.”
Elfi stood up “Herr Zingler, I, too, am anxious to find out what she can tell me.”
Soon they were all standing in the hall, near the joining of the corridors where Elfi had had her experience. “Mama, papa, Stefan, I think it will be best if you stay well back. I was alone each time she spoke to me, so I think the fewer people here, the easier it will be for her to speak.”
“Perhaps I too should stay back,” Herr Zingler said.
“No, sir. I think, if she had agreed to marry you, she wouldn’t be held back by your presence.”
Marta, Heinrich and Stefan walked away until they were almost to the first dressing room, and turned to watch. Elfi and Herr Zingler moved forward, into the area where Elfi had experienced the first contact. Elfi closed her eyes and whispered Aunt Liesl, what can you tell us about your killer? Then she stood, silent and relaxed, waiting, and barely conscious of Herr Zingler’s presence beside her. And then she felt the other presence, and heard the same voice start to speak, faintly.
Aunt Liesle part 4
“Elfi,” the voice whispered, “you brought my Ludwig. I have never been able to speak to him. Perhaps now he will hear me, too. Let me tell you of that night. I had seen a well-dressed man in the hall when I went to rehearse. He was tall, though not so tall as Ludwig, with light brown hair and blue eyes. He smiled at me and bowed as I passed him. I nodded, and went on and forgot about him. When I came back, I saw a man’s black silk top hat on the floor. I remembered then the man I had seen, and bent to pick it up. I thought to give it to Analiese to take care of.
“As I bent, someone grabbed me, and his hands wrapped around my neck. He turned me, and as my breath left me, I saw his face. It was the same man. He was a friend of the concert meister, his name was Fritz something. As I lost consciousness, he took the locket from my neck. In it were pictures of my niece and nephew, Marta and Karl. And on the chain I had hung the ring Ludwig had given me. I could not wear it until we talked to my parents. He took from me my life, and my two most important keepsakes. Tell Ludwig, Elfi. Find him, and give me rest.”
The voice faded, and after a moment, Elfi turned to look at Herr Zingler. “Did you hear anything, sir?” she asked.
He looked at her sadly, and shook his head. “No, I heard nothing, but this time I felt her presence. What did she say?”
Elfi told him everything. His eyes lit up, and he smiled. “At last, I have the clue that I need. I know him, Fritz von Hoffmann. And I have seen that locket! His daughter wears it – I never recognised it, Liesl must have worn it inside her dress. Thank you, my dear. Now I will go to the present Chief and tell him what to look for. Thank you, thank you!” he clasped her in his arms and gave her a huge hug.
Marta, Heinrich and Stefan came hurrying up. “It worked!” Stefan declared. “I can tell, you both look so happy!”
“Yes, it worked. And now I must go to the police station and tell them what we have learned. It will not be easy to arrest the man he is of a prominent and wealthy family. But if we can just get his daughter alone for a moment, we can prove his guilt. Please excuse me, I must go. Thank you all. Soon, I hope, my Liesl and I will have peace.” Ludwig hurried off.
Elfi explained to the others what Aunt Liesl had told her. Marta nodded when she mentioned the locket. “Yes, I remember it. It was gold, and shaped like a heart with very small diamonds around the edge. It could only be opened if you knew the secret. She showed me, and showed me the pictures. We must let Herr Zingler know that, or finding the locket will not help. The only proof that it was Liesl’s would be the pictures of me and Karl.”
“I will call him, Marta, when we get home.” Heinrich said.
It was three months later when a call came from Herr Zingler, asking if Marta and Elfi would please come to the police station. When they got there, they saw a woman of Marta’s age, looking shaken and bewildered, sitting in the Chief’s office. Ludwig Zingler was there, too. Then Chief Leopold Boxleitner stood, and held out his hand.
“Thank you so much for coming so quickly, Frau Von Croy. This is Brigitta Saxi, daughter of Fritz von Hoffmann. Please, sit down. We have explained why we wanted to see her, and she is willing to show us the locket, but she claims that it does not open. Here it is – it this the one you remember?”
Marta took the locket in her hand, tears in her eyes as she held it. Looking up, she said “Yes, this is Aunt Liesl’s locket.” Holding it between her thumb and forefinger, she squeezed, and it popped open. She looked at the pictures inside, and handed it back, tears streaming down her face. “That is me, when I was ten, and Karl was eight at the time.” Chief Boxleitner took the locket, and turned to Frau Saxi. She was staring at it in shock, and shaking her head in denial.
“No, no!” she exclaimed. “My father would never have done such a thing!”
“Please, Frau Saxi, try to be calm. When did your father give this to you?” the chief asked.
Taking a handkerchief from her bag and wiping her eyes, Brigitta Saxi took a deep breath. “He gave it to me on my tenth birthday, August fifteenth, 1898.”
“One month after Aunt Liesl was killed,” Marta said. “Oh, my dear, I am so sorry to bring such terrible sadness to you. But that is my aunt’s locket and it was taken from her neck the day she was killed. There was a ring hung on the chain, too.”
Slowly Brigitta took off her glove, and raised her right hand. On it was a gold ring with a central diamond with a small heart in white gold on each side. “He gave this to my Mother for their fifteenth wedding anniversary, in June 1899.”
Ludwig stepped forward and took her hand. “Yes, that is the ring I gave to Liesl that night. Inside are the Runes for our initials.”
Brigitta took the ring off, and looked. “Mother and I always wondered what they were. Papa said it was Love in an old language.” She looked down at her hands for a moment then looked up. “I have to believe you, yet I can’t imagine my Father killing anyone. He was always so loving to me and mama, and so proud of her. She was a great singer. Her name was Ingrid Erstweiler.”
Ludwig stared at her for a moment then said “She was arrested for the murder, when she was found standing over the body screaming. But it was easy to prove that she was innocent, so she was released. Perhaps that is why he did it. Liesl was one step above your mother, and was getting all of the attention from the meisters and the public. He must have loved her so much he wanted to give her the chance at the career he felt she deserved. I know that is no real consolation, Frau Saxi.”
For a long moment silence reigned in the office. Then Chief Boxleitner sighed and said he would have to arrest Herr Hoffmann. At that, Brigitta looked up. “Oh, must you?” she asked. “He is a very ill man, he is dying. Could you not let him die in his own bed, in his own home? The doctor said he had no more than two months, at most.” She looked around at them all. “I am not asking that you excuse what he has done. But….” she stopped, unable to go on.
Elfi looked up at Herr Zingler. She felt Aunt Liesl’s presence, and saw that he felt her, too. Then the familiar voice whispered “thank you, Elfi, Ludwig. I am at peace now, and am free. Let him die in his bed – he will soon be judged by God.” They felt the presence fade, and both smiled, happy to know that she was at peace at last. Marta had been watching Elfi, and smiled, too.
“Frau Saxi, we are content, now that we know the truth. Go home to your family and take care of your father. He will face the Great Judge, and we will leave him to His mercy.”
Brigitta held out the ring and locket. “These are yours,” she stroked a finger over the locket. “I have no right to them.”
Marta hesitated then looked up at Ludwig Zingler, who shook his head. She reached over and folded Brigitta’s fingers over the jewellery. “No, my dear. They have been yours for many years, and they mean a great deal to you. Liesl would not want to take them from you, nor will we. I have many things to remind me of my favourite aunt. Keep them to remind you of your loving father and mother.”
Brigitta Saxi looked at Marta for a moment, then clasped her other hand over their joined hands. “Thank you, and God bless you all.”
With that the meeting broke up, and they all stood. Chief Boxleitner shook hands with everyone, and accompanied them to the front door. Ludwig Zingler stood with him, watching. As the autos drove way, they looked at each other in relief. At last they could put that case away. Both felt great satisfaction, even though there would be no trial, and no one would ever know how it was solved.
The Old Woman by Florence Simpson
Inspired by a picture of a girl with a violin – a sequel to Aunt Liesle
The old woman limped slowly down the street, pushing a walker ahead. She stayed as close to the buildings as she could, so that she would not block the way for the younger, faster pedestrians. She paused at times, to study the display in a window, and sometimes she found a spot where she could sit in the walker and rest.
‘I’m getting old,’ she thought, as she watched the people passing. ‘Once upon a time, I could have walked as fast as they do, but that time is long past.’ She moved on, thinking of her long life, its joys and sorrows, its triumphs and failures. But really, there had been few failures. Her career had started when she was quite young, and had only ended when arthritis made it impossible to play her violin for more than a half hour at a time.
She smiled as she remembered; first, the wonderful training and encouragement of Herr Wesler, when she was so young and nervous. She never forgot his advice “forget the others, forget the adjudicators. Remember only yourself and your violin, and you will do very well!” And she had done well, very well!
She remembered the concert halls, the conductors; Herr Steindachner at Kursalon, Herr Helmut Wiedermann, in the Stiflersaal in Bruchnerhaus, and the many others. Until finally there was Herr Pauli Rudel, the premier conductor in Europe at The Golden Hall in the Musikverein! What a triumph that had been for a young woman of barely twenty years. She still felt the awe and joy of that time.
Now she was over ninety, but still able at times to play. And her other career, her other love – astronomy; that too had been a joy. She had discovered new planets, new nebulae. Her name was known worldwide in both music and astronomy circles. She was content with her life. But she missed her parents, gone long years ago. And her young brother so successful in both of his careers, music and biology, snuffed out with his whole family by a drunk driver. Her husband had died twenty years ago, her children scattered far and wide across the world. They came to see her when they could, but it was a lonely life.
She moved on, still thinking of the past, and smiled again as she remembered Herr Ludwig Zingler, the man who had never given up the quest to fine Aunt Liesle’s killer. She remembered him so clearly, and the day they had first met. That had been a very satisfying time. Together, they had contacted Aunt Liesle’s spirit, and had the killer found. But he was old and dying when they found him, so they just marked the case closed and did nothing. He died not long after, repenting what he did.
‘Enough of this looking back,’ she told herself. ‘Look forward! This month, this Christmas, all of the children and their families will be here, to celebrate the birth of Jesus – and mine. What a glorious time it will be!’
She was tiring now, so she found a sidewalk patio and settled down for a rest and a snack. She pulled a book from her carrier and started reading, after placing her order. After a while, she became aware of someone standing beside her. She looked up to see a young boy and girl gazing at her, awe and hesitation on their faces.
Smiling, she said “is there something I can do for you?” They looked at each other, then the girl, obviously the elder, nodded.
“Aren’t you Doctor Elfi Von Croy the Violinist and Astronomer?”
“Yes, I am,” she nodded, still smiling.
They both reached into their bags and pulled out books. As they held them out, she saw that they were copies of the book she had written, comparing music and mathematics, and how the one enhances a person’s abilities in the other. She looked from the books to the children’s faces.
“Have you read the book?” she asked. When they nodded, she went on “do you understand what I was saying?” Again, nods, this time with smiles. “And you are both budding musicians and mathematicians.” Not a question, but a statement.
“Yes, ma’am,” the girl said. “We are students at the same school you went to, and we both have all of the records and CDs you made. Would you sign these for us? Please?”
Elfi smiled and took both of the books. “Ladies first,” she said. “What is your name, dear? And what do you play?”
“Gretel Meisner, Ma‘am” she said softly. “I play the violin.” Elfie smiled and wrote ‘when you play, forget everything but yourself and your violin, then you will always perform at your best.’ Signed and dated it. Then she turned to the boy.
“I’m Heinrich Treffen, Ma’am, and I play piano and clarinet, just like your brother.” He smiled hesitantly, and she smiled back. “I will give you the same advice I gave to Gretel,” she told him. “It was the advice Herr Gunther Wesler gave me when I was thirteen. It has served me all my life.” Finished signing, she handed both books back. “Thank you for remembering me. At my age, it means a lot. You both have all my best wishes for your future careers.”
They thanked her and took the books, replacing them in the bags carefully. “Thank you for taking time with us,” Gretel said, and Heinrich nodded agreement. She sat for a while, watching them as they walked away. Then she stood up, took her walker, and turned back the way she had come. It was time now to go home, take her medication, and play for a while. She smiled as she limped along, her heart lighter for knowing that somehow she had had a positive effect on at least two young lives. ‘That is enough for anyone, to know that they have made a difference.’
An old man who had noticed the encounter watched as she disappeared into the crowd, and wondered just who she was, that young teenagers would treat her with such honour.