In 1814, Stackelberg turned up again to pick up "his" children (including Minona). Josephine refused, so he called the police to remove the three toddlers forcefully. However, as it turned out, Stackelberg did not take the children to his home in
Estonia – instead he went to travel the world again, having dumped them at a deacon's place in
Bohemia. Josephine, alone and increasingly ailing, "hired the dubious mathematics teacher Andrian [Karl Eduard von Andrehan-Werburg] ... she gradually fell under his charismatic spell, becoming pregnant and giving birth to Emilie [on 16 September 1815], hiding in a hut." Meanwhile, Stackelberg had made an inheritance (a brother had died) and came to
Vienna, in April 1815, to fetch Josephine. Being pregnant and due to the long since irreparably broken relationship, she was not interested. Stackelberg reacted by writing her a long letter indicating how much he "despised" her, and also went to the police to
slander her: a police report on 30 June 1815 about Josephine's "reputation" was possibly based on Stackelberg's report of an alleged incestuous incident among her children. Josephine then threw out Andrian, who took over his illegitimate daughter and raised her alone (she died two years later of the
measles). But as if this series of traumatic incidents was not enough, more heartbreak was to follow: Dechant Franz Leyer in
Trautenau wrote her on 29 December 1815 that he had her three young daughters in his custody, but Stackelberg had long since stopped sending any money. Josephine and Therese – excited to hear of them again after almost two years - scraped together as much money as they could and sent it to Leyer, who soon afterward suggested they should take the children home to their mother where they belonged, given that their father had gone missing. Fate would have it that just when Josephine was certain to finally see her children again, Christoph von Stackelberg's brother Otto turned up in Trautenau to take them away. There is evidence that both Josephine and Beethoven were in
Baden in the summer of 1816 where they most likely met, and it even seems that they had planned it: Josephine had requested a passport to travel to the German spa of
Bad Pyrmont but did not go there after all. Intriguingly, in August 1816, Beethoven made an entry in his
Diary: "not to P – t, but with P. - discuss the best way how to arrange it." ==Death==