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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/1651.txt b/1651.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..46e9904 --- /dev/null +++ b/1651.txt @@ -0,0 +1,13415 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery of Orcival, by Emile Gaboriau + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Mystery of Orcival + +Author: Emile Gaboriau + +Release Date: January 1, 2006 [EBook #1651] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY OF ORCIVAL *** + + + + +Produced by An Anonymous Volunteer + + + + + + The Mystery of Orcival + + By + + Emile Gaboriau + + + + +I + + +On Thursday, the 9th of July, 186-, Jean Bertaud and his son, well known +at Orcival as living by poaching and marauding, rose at three o'clock in +the morning, just at daybreak, to go fishing. + +Taking their tackle, they descended the charming pathway, shaded by +acacias, which you see from the station at Evry, and which leads from +the burg of Orcival to the Seine. + +They made their way to their boat, moored as usual some fifty yards +above the wire bridge, across a field adjoining Valfeuillu, the imposing +estate of the Count de Tremorel. + +Having reached the river-bank, they laid down their tackle, and Jean +jumped into the boat to bail out the water in the bottom. + +While he was skilfully using the scoop, he perceived that one of the +oar-pins of the old craft, worn by the oar, was on the point of +breaking. + +"Philippe," cried he, to his son, who was occupied in unravelling a net, +"bring me a bit of wood to make a new oar-pin." + +"All right," answered Philippe. + +There was no tree in the field. The young man bent his steps toward the +park of Valfeuillu, a few rods distant; and, neglectful of Article 391 +of the Penal Code, jumped across the wide ditch which surrounds M. de +Tremorel's domain. He thought he would cut off a branch of one of the +old willows, which at this place touch the water with their drooping +branches. + +He had scarcely drawn his knife from his pocket, while looking about him +with the poacher's unquiet glance, when he uttered a low cry, "Father! +Here! Father!" + +"What's the matter?" responded the old marauder, without pausing from +his work. + +"Father, come here!" continued Philippe. "In Heaven's name, come here, +quick!" + +Jean knew by the tone of his son's voice that something unusual had +happened. He threw down his scoop, and, anxiety quickening him, in three +leaps was in the park. He also stood still, horror-struck, before the +spectacle which had terrified Philippe. + +On the bank of the river, among the stumps and flags, was stretched a +woman's body. Her long, dishevelled locks lay among the water-shrubs; +her dress--of gray silk--was soiled with mire and blood. All the upper +part of the body lay in shallow water, and her face had sunk in the mud. + +"A murder!" muttered Philippe, whose voice trembled. + +"That's certain," responded Jean, in an indifferent tone. "But who can +this woman be? Really one would say, the countess." + +"We'll see," said the young man. He stepped toward the body; his father +caught him by the arm. + +"What would you do, fool?" said he. "You ought never to touch the body +of a murdered person without legal authority." + +"You think so?" + +"Certainly. There are penalties for it." + +"Then, come along and let's inform the Mayor." + +"Why? as if people hereabouts were not against us enough already! Who +knows that they would not accuse us--" + +"But, father--" + +"If we go and inform Monsieur Courtois, he will ask us how and why we +came to be in Monsieur de Tremorel's park to find this out. What is it +to you, that the countess has been killed? They'll find her body without +you. Come, let's go away." + +But Philippe did not budge. Hanging his head, his chin resting upon his +palm, he reflected. + +"We must make this known," said he, firmly. "We are not savages; we will +tell Monsieur Courtois that in passing along by the park in our boat, we +perceived the body." + +Old Jean resisted at first; then, seeing that his son would, if need be, +go without him, yielded. + +They re-crossed the ditch, and leaving their fishing-tackle in the +field, directed their steps hastily toward the mayor's house. + +Orcival, situated a mile or more from Corbeil, on the right bank of the +Seine, is one of the most charming villages in the environs of Paris, +despite the infernal etymology of its name. The gay and thoughtless +Parisian, who, on Sunday, wanders about the fields, more destructive +than the rook, has not yet discovered this smiling country. The +distressing odor of the frying from coffee-gardens does not there stifle +the perfume of the honeysuckles. The refrains of bargemen, the brazen +voices of boat-horns, have never awakened echoes there. Lazily situated +on the gentle slopes of a bank washed by the Seine, the houses of +Orcival are white, and there are delicious shades, and a bell-tower +which is the pride of the place. On all sides vast pleasure domains, +kept up at great cost, surround it. From the upper part, the +weathercocks of twenty chateaux may be seen. On the right is the forest +of Mauprevoir, and the pretty country-house of the Countess de la +Breche; opposite, on the other side of the river, is Mousseaux and +Petit-Bourg, the ancient domain of Aguado, now the property of a famous +coach-maker; on the left, those beautiful copses belong to the Count de +Tremorel, that large park is d'Etiolles, and in the distance beyond is +Corbeil; that vast building, whose roofs are higher than the oaks, is +the Darblay mill. + +The mayor of Orcival occupies a handsome, pleasant mansion, at the upper +end of the village. Formerly a manufacturer of dry goods, M. Courtois +entered business without a penny, and after thirty years of absorbing +toil, he retired with four round millions of francs. + +Then he proposed to live tranquilly with his wife and children, passing +the winter at Paris and the summer at his country-house. + +But all of a sudden he was observed to be disturbed and agitated. +Ambition stirred his heart. He took vigorous measures to be forced to +accept the mayoralty of Orcival. And he accepted it, quite in +self-defence, as he will himself tell you. This office was at once his +happiness and his despair; apparent despair, interior and real +happiness. + +It quite befits him, with clouded brow, to rail at the cares of power; +he appears yet better when, his waist encircled with the gold-laced +scarf, he goes in triumph at the head of the municipal body. + +Everybody was sound asleep at the mayor's when the two Bertauds rapped +the heavy knocker of the door. After a moment, a servant, half asleep, +appeared at one of the ground-floor windows. + +"What's the matter, you rascals?" asked he, growling. + +Jean did not think it best to revenge an insult which his reputation in +the village too well justified. + +"We want to speak to Monsieur the Mayor," he answered. "There is +terrible need of it. Go call him, Monsieur Baptiste; he won't blame +you." + +"I'd like to see anybody blame me," snapped out Baptiste. + +It took ten minutes of talking and explaining to persuade the servant. +Finally, the Bertauds were admitted to a little man, fat and red, very +much annoyed at being dragged from his bed so early. It was M. Courtois. + +They had decided that Philippe should speak. + +"Monsieur Mayor," he said, "we have come to announce to you a great +misfortune. A crime has been committed at Monsieur de Tremorel's." + +M. Courtois was a friend of the count's; he became whiter than his shirt +at this sudden news. + +"My God!" stammered he, unable to control his emotion, "what do you +say--a crime!" + +"Yes; we have just discovered a body; and as sure as you are here, I +believe it to be that of the countess." + +The worthy man raised his arms heavenward, with a wandering air. + +"But where, when?" + +"Just now, at the foot of the park, as we were going to take up our +nets." + +"It is horrible!" exclaimed the good M. Courtois; "what a calamity! So +worthy a lady! But it is not possible--you must be mistaken; I should +have been informed--" + +"We saw it distinctly, Monsieur Mayor." + +"Such a crime in my village! Well, you have done wisely to come here. I +will dress at once, and will hasten off--no, wait." He reflected a +moment, then called: + +"Baptiste!" + +The valet was not far off. With ear and eye alternately pressed against +the key-hole, he heard and looked with all his might. At the sound of +his master's voice he had only to stretch out his hand and open the +door. + +"Monsieur called me?" + +"Run to the justice of the peace," said the mayor. "There is not a +moment to lose. A crime has been committed--perhaps a murder--you must +go quickly. And you," addressing the poachers, "await me here while I +slip on my coat." + +The justice of the peace at Orcival, M. Plantat--"Papa Plantat," as he +was called--was formerly an attorney at Melun. At fifty, Mr. Plantat, +whose career had been one of unbroken prosperity, lost in the same +month, his wife, whom he adored, and his two sons, charming youths, one +eighteen, the other twenty-two years old. These successive losses +crushed a man whom thirty years of happiness left without defence +against misfortune. For a long time his reason was despaired of. Even +the sight of a client, coming to trouble his grief, to recount stupid +tales of self-interest, exasperated him. It was not surprising that he +sold out his professional effects and good-will at half price. He wished +to establish himself at his ease in his grief, with the certainty of not +being disturbed in its indulgence. + +But the intensity of his mourning diminished, and the ills of idleness +came. The justiceship of the peace at Orcival was vacant, and M. Plantat +applied for and obtained it. Once installed in this office, he suffered +less from ennui. This man, who saw his life drawing to an end, undertook +to interest himself in the thousand diverse cases which came before him. +He applied to these all the forces of a superior intelligence, the +resources of a mind admirably fitted to separate the false from the true +among the lies he was forced to hear. He persisted, besides, in living +alone, despite the urging of M. Courtois; pretending that society +fatigued him, and that an unhappy man is a bore in company. + +Misfortune, which modifies characters, for good or bad, had made him, +apparently, a great egotist. He declared that he was only interested in +the affairs of life as a critic tired of its active scenes. He loved to +make a parade of his profound indifference for everything, swearing that +a rain of fire descending upon Paris, would not even make him turn his +head. To move him seemed impossible. "What's that to me?" was his +invariable exclamation. + +Such was the man who, a quarter of an hour after Baptiste's departure, +entered the mayor's house. + +M. Plantat was tall, thin, and nervous. His physiognomy was not +striking. His hair was short, his restless eyes seemed always to be +seeking something, his very long nose was narrow and sharp. After his +affliction, his mouth, formerly well shaped, became deformed; his lower +lip had sunk, and gave him a deceptive look of simplicity. + +"They tell me," said he, at the threshold, "that Madame de Tremorel has +been murdered." + +"These men here, at least, pretend so," answered the mayor, who had just +reappeared. + +M. Courtois was no longer the same man. He had had time to make his +toilet a little. His face attempted to express a haughty coldness. He +had been reproaching himself for having been wanting in dignity, in +showing his grief before the Bertauds. "Nothing ought to agitate a man +in my position," said he to himself. And, being terribly agitated, he +forced himself to be calm, cold, and impassible. + +M. Plantat was so naturally. + +"This is a very sad event," said he, in a tone which he forced himself +to make perfectly disinterested; "but after all, how does it concern us? +We must, however, hurry and ascertain whether it is true. I have sent +for the brigadier, and he will join us." + +"Let us go," said M. Courtois; "I have my scarf in my pocket." + +They hastened off. Philippe and his father went first, the young man +eager and impatient, the old one sombre and thoughtful. The mayor, at +each step, made some exclamation. + +"I can't understand it," muttered he; "a murder in my commune! a commune +where, in the memory of men, no crime has been committed!" + +And he directed a suspicious glance toward the two Bertauds. The road +which led toward the chateau of M. de Tremorel was an unpleasant one, +shut in by walls a dozen feet high. On one side is the park of the +Marchioness de Lanascol; on the other the spacious garden of Saint +Jouan. The going and coming had taken time; it was nearly eight o'clock +when the mayor, the justice, and their guides stopped before the gate of +M. de Tremorel. + +The mayor rang. The bell was very large; only a small gravelled court of +five or six yards separated the gate from the house; nevertheless no one +appeared. + +The mayor rang more vigorously, then with all his strength; but in vain. + +Before the gate of Mme. de Lanascol's chateau, nearly opposite, a groom +was standing, occupied in cleaning and polishing a bridle-bit. "It's of +no use to ring, gentlemen," said this man; "there's nobody in the +chateau." + +"How! nobody?" asked the mayor, surprised. + +"I mean," said the groom, "that there is no one there but the master and +mistress. The servants all went away last evening by the 8.40 train to +Paris, to the wedding of the old cook, Madame Denis. They ought to +return this morning by the first train. I was invited myself--" + +"Great God!" interrupted M. Courtois, "then the count and countess +remained alone last night?" + +"Entirely alone, Monsieur Mayor." + +"It is horrible!" + +M. Plantat seemed to grow impatient during this dialogue. "Come," said +he, "we cannot stay forever at the gate. The gendarmes do not come; let +us send for the locksmith." Philippe was about to hasten off, when, at +the end of the road, singing and laughing were heard. Five persons, +three women and two men, soon appeared. + +"Ah, there are the people of the chateau," cried the groom, whom this +morning visit seemed to annoy, "they ought to have a key." + +The domestics, seeing the group about the gate, became silent and +hastened their steps. One of them began to run ahead of the others; it +was the count's valet de chambre. + +"These gentlemen perhaps wish to speak to Monsieur the Count?" asked he, +having bowed to M. Plantat. + +"We have rung five times, as hard as we could," said the mayor. + +"It is surprising," said the valet de chambre, "the count sleeps very +lightly. Perhaps he has gone out." + +"Horror!" cried Philippe. "Both of them have been murdered!" These words +shocked the servants, whose gayety announced a reasonable number of +healths drunk to the happiness of the newly wedded pair. M. Courtois +seemed to be studying the attitude of old Bertaud. + +"A murder!" muttered the valet de chambre. "It was for money then; it +must have been known--" + +"What?" asked the mayor. + +"Monsieur the Count received a very large sum yesterday morning." + +"Large! yes," added a chambermaid. "He had a large package of +bank-bills. Madame even said to Monsieur that she should not shut her +eyes the whole night, with this immense sum in the house." + +There was a silence; each one looked at the others with a frightened +air. M. Courtois reflected. + +"At what hour did you leave the chateau last evening?" asked he of the +servants. + +"At eight o'clock; we had dinner early." + +"You went away all together?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"You did not leave each other?" + +"Not a minute." + +"And you returned all together?" + +The servants exchanged a significant look. + +"All," responded a chambermaid--"that is to say, no. One left us on +reaching the Lyons station at Paris; it was Guespin." + +"Yes, sir; he went away, saying that he would rejoin us at Wepler's, in +the Batignolles, where the wedding took place." The mayor nudged the +justice with his elbow, as if to attract his attention, and continued to +question the chambermaid. + +"And this Guespin, as you call him--did you see him again?" + +"No, sir. I asked several times during the evening in vain, what had +become of him; his absence seemed to me suspicious." Evidently the +chambermaid tried to show superior perspicacity. A little more, and she +would have talked of presentiments. + +"Has this Guespin been long in the house?" + +"Since spring." + +"What were his duties?" + +"He was sent from Paris by the house of the 'Skilful Gardener,' to take +care of the rare flowers in Madame's conservatory." + +"And did he know of this money?" + +The domestics again exchanged significant glances. + +"Yes," they answered in chorus, "we had talked a great deal about it +among ourselves." + +The chambermaid added: "He even said to me, 'To think that Monsieur the +Count has enough money in his cabinet to make all our fortunes.'" + +"What kind of a man is this?" + +This question absolutely extinguished the talkativeness of the servants. +No one dared to speak, perceiving that the least word might serve as the +basis of a terrible accusation. But the groom of the house opposite, who +burned to mix himself up in the affair, had none of these scruples. +"Guespin," answered he, "is a good fellow. Lord, what jolly things he +knows! He knows everything you can imagine. It appears he has been rich +in times past, and if he wished--But dame! he loves to have his work all +finished, and go off on sprees. He's a crack billiard-player, I can tell +you." + +Papa Plantat, while listening in an apparently absent-minded way to +these depositions, or rather these scandals, carefully examined the wall +and the gate. He now turned, and interrupting the groom: + +"Enough of this," said he, to the great scandal of M. Courtois. "Before +pursuing this interrogatory, let us ascertain the crime, if crime there +is; for it is not proved. Let whoever has the key, open the gate." + +The valet de chambre had the key; he opened the gate, and all entered +the little court. The gendarmes had just arrived. The mayor told the +brigadier to follow him, and placed two men at the gate, ordering them +not to permit anyone to enter or go out, unless by his orders. Then the +valet de chambre opened the door of the house. + + + + +II + + +If there had been no crime, at least something extraordinary had taken +place at the chateau; the impassible justice might have been convinced +of it, as soon as he had stepped into the vestibule. The glass door +leading to the garden was wide open, and three of the panes were +shattered into a thousand pieces. The carpeting of waxed canvas between +the doors had been torn up, and on the white marble slabs large drops of +blood were visible. At the foot of the staircase was a stain larger than +the rest, and upon the lowest step a splash hideous to behold. + +Unfitted for such spectacles, or for the mission he had now to perform, +M. Courtois became faint. Luckily, he borrowed from the idea of his +official importance, an energy foreign to his character. The more +difficult the preliminary examination of this affair seemed, the more +determined he was to carry it on with dignity. + +"Conduct us to the place where you saw the body," said he to Bertaud. +But Papa Plantat intervened. + +"It would be wiser, I think," he objected, "and more methodical, to +begin by going through the house." + +"Perhaps--yes--true, that's my own view," said the mayor, grasping at +the other's counsel, as a drowning man clings to a plank. And he made +all retire excepting the brigadier and the valet de chambre, the latter +remaining to serve as guide. "Gendarmes," cried he to the men guarding +the gate, "see to it that no one goes out; prevent anybody from entering +the house, and above all, let no one go into the garden." + +Then they ascended the staircase. Drops of blood were sprinkled all +along the stairs. There was also blood on the baluster, and M. Courtois +perceived, with horror, that his hands were stained. + +When they had reached the first landing-stage, the mayor said to the +valet de chambre: + +"Tell me, my friend, did your master and mistress occupy the same +chamber?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"And where is their chamber?" + +"There, sir." + +As he spoke, the valet de chambre staggered back terrified, and pointed +to a door, the upper panel of which betrayed the imprint of a bloody +hand. Drops of perspiration overspread the poor mayor's forehead. He too +was terrified, and could hardly keep on his feet. Alas, authority brings +with it terrible obligations! The brigadier, an old soldier of the +Crimea, visibly moved, hesitated. + +M. Plantat alone, as tranquil as if he were in his garden, retained his +coolness, and looked around upon the others. + +"We must decide," said he. + +He entered the room; the rest followed. + +There was nothing unusual in the apartment; it was a boudoir hung in +blue satin, furnished with a couch and four arm-chairs, covered also +with blue satin. One of the chairs was overturned. + +They passed on to the bed-chamber. + +A frightful disorder appeared in this room. There was not an article of +furniture, not an ornament, which did not betray that a terrible, +enraged and merciless struggle had taken place between the assassins and +their victims. In the middle of the chamber a small table was +overturned, and all about it were scattered lumps of sugar, vermilion +cups, and pieces of porcelain. + +"Ah!" said the valet de chambre, "Monsieur and Madame were taking tea +when the wretches came in!" + +The mantel ornaments had been thrown upon the floor; the clock, in +falling, had stopped at twenty minutes past three. Near the clock were +the lamps; the globes were in pieces, the oil had been spilled. + +The canopy of the bed had been torn down, and covered the bed. Someone +must have clutched desperately at the draperies. All the furniture was +overturned. The coverings of the chairs had been hacked by strokes of a +knife, and in places the stuffing protruded. The secretary had been +broken open; the writing-slide, dislocated, hung by its hinges; the +drawers were open and empty, and everywhere, blood--blood upon the +carpet, the furniture, the curtains--above all, upon the bed-curtains. + +"Poor wretches!" stammered the mayor. "They were murdered here." + +Every one for a moment was appalled. But meanwhile, the justice of the +peace devoted himself to a minute scrutiny, taking notes upon his +tablets, and looking into every corner. When he had finished: + +"Come," said he, "let us go into the other rooms." + +Everywhere there was the same disorder. A band of furious maniacs, or +criminals seized with a frenzy, had certainly passed the night in the +house. + +The count's library, especially, had been turned topsy-turvy. The +assassins had not taken the trouble to force the locks; they had gone to +work with a hatchet. Surely they were confident of not being overheard; +for they must have struck tremendous blows to make the massive oaken +bureau fly in pieces. + +Neither parlor nor smoking-room had been respected. Couches, chairs, +canopies were cut and torn as if they had been lunged at with swords. +Two spare chambers for guests were all in confusion. + +They then ascended to the second story. + +There, in the first room which they penetrated, they found, beside a +trunk which had been assaulted, but which was not opened, a hatchet for +splitting wood which the valet de chambre recognized as belonging to the +house. + +"Do you understand now?" said the mayor to M. Plantat. "The assassins +were in force, that's clear. The murder accomplished, they scattered +through the chateau, seeking everywhere the money they knew they would +find here. One of them was engaged in breaking open this trunk, when the +others, below, found the money; they called him; he hastened down, and +thinking all further search useless, he left the hatchet here." + +"I see it," said the brigadier, "just as if I had been here." + +The ground-floor, which they next visited, had been respected. Only, +after the crime had been committed, and the money secured, the murderers +had felt the necessity of refreshing themselves. They found the remains +of their supper in the dining-room. They had eaten up all the cold meats +left in the cupboard. On the table, beside eight empty bottles of wine +and liqueurs, were ranged five glasses. + +"There were five of them," said the mayor. + +By force of will, M. Courtois had recovered his self-possession. + +"Before going to view the bodies," said he, "I will send word to the +procureur of Corbeil. In an hour, we will have a judge of instruction, +who will finish our painful task." + +A gendarme was instructed to harness the count's buggy, and to hasten to +the procureur. Then the mayor and the justice, followed by the +brigadier, the valet de chambre, and the two Bertauds, took their way +toward the river. + +The park of Valfeuillu was very wide from right to left. From the house +to the Seine it was almost two hundred steps. Before the house was a +grassy lawn, interspersed with flower-beds. Two paths led across the +lawn to the river-bank. + +But the murderers had not followed the paths. Making a short cut, they +had gone straight across the lawn. Their traces were perfectly visible. +The grass was trampled and stamped down as if a heavy load had been +dragged over it. In the midst of the lawn they perceived something red; +M. Plantat went and picked it up. It was a slipper, which the valet de +chambre recognized as the count's. Farther on, they found a white silk +handkerchief, which the valet declared he had often seen around the +count's neck. This handkerchief was stained with blood. + +At last they arrived at the river-bank, under the willows from which +Philippe had intended to cut off a branch; there they saw the body. The +sand at this place was much indented by feet seeking a firm support. +Everything indicated that here had been the supreme struggle. + +M. Courtois understood all the importance of these traces. + +"Let no one advance," said he, and, followed by the justice of the +peace, he approached the corpse. Although the face could not be +distinguished, both recognized the countess. Both had seen her in this +gray robe, adorned with blue trimmings. + +Now, how came she there? + +The mayor thought that having succeeded in escaping from the hands of +the murderers, she had fled wildly. They had pursued her, had caught up +with her there, and she had fallen to rise no more. This version +explained the traces of the struggle. It must have been the count's body +that they had dragged across the lawn. + +M. Courtois talked excitedly, trying to impose his ideas on the justice. +But M. Plantat hardly listened; you might have thought him a hundred +leagues from Valfeuillu; he only responded by monosyllables--yes, no, +perhaps. And the worthy mayor gave himself great pains; he went and +came, measured steps, minutely scrutinized the ground. + +There was not at this place more than a foot of water. A mud-bank, upon +which grew some clumps of flags and some water-lilies, descended by a +gentle decline from the bank to the middle of the river. The water was +very clear, and there was no current; the slippery and slimy mire could +be distinctly seen. + +M. Courtois had gone thus far in his investigations, when he was struck +by a sudden idea. + +"Bertaud," said he, "come here." + +The old poacher obeyed. + +"You say that you saw the body from your boat?" + +"Yes, Monsieur Mayor." + +"Where is your boat?" + +"There, hauled up to that field." + +"Well, lead us to it." + +It was clear to all that this order had a great effect upon the man. He +trembled and turned pale under his rough skin, tanned as it was by sun +and storm. He was even seen to cast a menacing look toward his son. + +"Let us go," said he at last. + +They were returning to the house when the valet proposed to pass over +the ditch. "That will be the quickest way," said he, "I will go for a +ladder which we will put across." + +He went off, and quickly reappeared with his improvised foot-bridge. But +at the moment he was adjusting it, the mayor cried out to him: + +"Stop!" + +The imprints left by the Bertauds on both sides of the ditch had just +caught his eye. + +"What is this?" said he; "evidently someone has crossed here, and not +long ago; for the traces of the steps are quite fresh." + +After an examination of some minutes he ordered that the ladder should +be placed farther off. When they had reached the boat, he said to Jean, +"Is this the boat with which you went to take up your nets this +morning?" + +"Yes." + +"Then," resumed M. Courtois, "what implements did you use? your cast net +is perfectly dry; this boat-hook and these oars have not been wet for +twenty-four hours." + +The distress of the father and son became more and more evident. + +"Do you persist in what you say, Bertaud?" said the mayor. + +"Certainly." + +"And you, Philippe?" + +"Monsieur," stammered the young man, "we have told the truth." + +"Really!" said M. Courtois, in an ironical tone. "Then you will explain +to the proper authorities how it was that you could see anything from a +boat which you had not entered. It will be proved to you, also, that the +body is in a position where it is impossible to see it from the middle +of the river. Then you will still have to tell what these foot-prints on +the grass are, which go from your boat to the place where the ditch has +been crossed several times and by several persons." + +The two Bertauds hung their heads. + +"Brigadier," ordered the mayor, "arrest these two men in the name of the +law, and prevent all communication between them." + +Philippe seemed to be ill. As for old Jean, he contented himself with +shrugging his shoulders and saying to his son: + +"Well, you would have it so, wouldn't you?" + +While the brigadier led the two poachers away, and shut them up +separately, and under the guard of his men, the justice and the mayor +returned to the park. "With all this," muttered M. Courtois, "no traces +of the count." + +They proceeded to take up the body of the countess. The mayor sent for +two planks, which, with a thousand precautions, they placed on the +ground, being able thus to move the countess without effacing the +imprints necessary for the legal examination. Alas! it was indeed she +who had been the beautiful, the charming Countess de Tremorel! Here were +her smiling face, her lovely, speaking eyes, her fine, sensitive mouth. + +There remained nothing of her former self. The face was unrecognizable, +so soiled and wounded was it. Her clothes were in tatters. Surely a +furious frenzy had moved the monsters who had slain the poor lady! She +had received more than twenty knife-wounds, and must have been struck +with a stick, or rather with a hammer; she had been dragged by her feet +and by her hair! + +In her left hand she grasped a strip of common cloth, torn, doubtless, +from the clothes of one of the assassins. The mayor, in viewing the +spectacle, felt his legs fail him, and supported himself on the arm of +the impassible Plantat. + +"Let us carry her to the house," said the justice, "and then we will +search for the count." + +The valet and brigadier (who had now returned) called on the domestics +for assistance. The women rushed into the garden. There was then a +terrible concert of cries, lamentations, and imprecations. + +"The wretches! So noble a mistress! So good a lady!" + +M. and Mme. de Tremorel, one could see, were adored by their people. + +The countess had just been laid upon the billiard-table, on the +ground-floor, when the judge of instruction and a physician were +announced. + +"At last!" sighed the worthy mayor; and in a lower tone he added, "the +finest medals have their reverse." + +For the first time in his life, he seriously cursed his ambition, and +regretted being the most important personage in Orcival. + + + + +III + + +The judge of instruction of the tribunal at Corbeil, was M. Antoine +Domini, a remarkable man, since called to higher functions. He was forty +years of age, of a prepossessing person, and endowed with a very +expressive, but too grave physiognomy. In him seemed typified the +somewhat stiff solemnity of the magistracy. Penetrated with the dignity +of his office, he sacrificed his life to it, rejecting the most simple +distractions, and the most innocent pleasures. + +He lived alone, seldom showing himself abroad; rarely received his +friends, not wishing, as he said, that the weaknesses of the man should +derogate from the sacred character of the judge. This latter reason had +deterred him from marrying, though he felt the need of a domestic +sphere. + +Always and everywhere he was the magistrate--that is, the +representative, even to fanaticism, of what he thought the most august +institution on the earth. Naturally gay, he would double-lock himself in +when he wished to laugh. He was witty; but if a bright sally escaped +him, you may be sure he repented of it. Body and soul he gave to his +vocation; and no one could bring more conscientiousness to the discharge +of what he thought to be his duty. He was also inflexible. It was +monstrous, in his eyes, to discuss an article of the code. The law +spoke; it was enough; he shut his eyes, covered his ears, and obeyed. + +From the day when a legal investigation commenced, he did not sleep, and +he employed every means to discover the truth. Yet he was not regarded +as a good judge of instruction; to contend by tricks with a prisoner was +repugnant to him; to lay a snare for a rogue he thought debasing; in +short, he was obstinate--obstinate to foolishness, sometimes to +absurdity; even to denying the existence of the sun at mid-day. + +The mayor and Papa Plantat hastened to meet M. Domini. He bowed to them +gravely, as if he had not known them, and presenting to them a man of +some sixty years who accompanied him: + +"Messieurs," said he, "this is Doctor Gendron." + +Papa Plantat shook hands with the doctor; the mayor smiled graciously at +him, for Dr. Gendron was well-known in those parts; he was even +celebrated, despite the nearness of Paris. Loving his art and exercising +it with a passionate energy, he yet owed his renown less to his science +than his manners. People said: "He is an original;" they admired his +affectation of independence, of scepticism, and rudeness. He made his +visits from five to nine in the morning--all the worse for those for +whom these hours were inconvenient. After nine o'clock the doctor was +not to be had. The doctor was working for himself, the doctor was in his +laboratory, the doctor was inspecting his cellar. It was rumored that he +sought for secrets of practical chemistry, to augment still more his +twenty thousand livres of income. And he did not deny it; for in truth +he was engaged on poisons, and was perfecting an invention by which +could be discovered traces of all the alkaloids which up to that time +had escaped analysis. If his friends reproached him, even jokingly, on +sending away sick people in the afternoon, he grew red with rage. + +"Parbleu!" he answered, "I find you superb! I am a doctor four hours in +the day. I am paid by hardly a quarter of my patients--that's three +hours I give daily to humanity, which I despise. Let each of you do as +much, and we shall see." + +The mayor conducted the new-comers into the drawing-room, where he +installed himself to write down the results of his examination. + +"What a misfortune for my town, this crime!" said he to M. Domini. "What +shame! Orcival has lost its reputation." + +"I know nothing of the affair," returned the judge. "The gendarme who +went for me knew little about it." + +M. Courtois recounted at length what his investigation had discovered, +not forgetting the minutest detail, dwelling especially on the excellent +precautions which he had had the sagacity to take. He told how the +conduct of the Bertauds had at first awakened his suspicions; how he had +detected them, at least in a pointblank lie; how, finally, he had +determined to arrest them. He spoke standing, his head thrown back, with +wordy emphasis. The pleasure of speaking partially rewarded him for his +recent distress. + +"And now," he concluded, "I have just ordered the most exact search, so +that doubtless we shall find the count's body. Five men, detailed by me, +and all the people of the house, are searching the park. If their +efforts are not crowned with success, I have here some fishermen who +will drag the river." + +M. Domini held his tongue, only nodding his head from time to time, as a +sign of approbation. He was studying, weighing the details told him, +building up in his mind a plan of proceeding. + +"You have acted wisely," said he, at last. "The misfortune is a great +one, but I agree with you that we are on the track of the criminals. +These poachers, or the gardener who has disappeared, have something, +perhaps, to do with this abominable crime." + +Already, for some minutes, M. Plantat had rather awkwardly concealed +some signs of impatience. + +"The misfortune is," said he, "that if Guespin is guilty, he will not be +such a fool as to show himself here." + +"Oh, we'll find him," returned M. Domini. "Before leaving Corbeil, I +sent a despatch to the prefecture of police at Paris, to ask for a +police agent, who will doubtless be here shortly." + +"While waiting," proposed the mayor, "perhaps you would like to see the +scene of the crime?" + +M. Domini made a motion as if to rise; then sat down again. + +"In fact, no," said he; "we will see nothing till the agent arrives. But +I must have some information concerning the Count and Countess de +Tremorel." + +The worthy mayor again triumphed. + +"Oh, I can give it to you," answered he quickly, "better than anybody. +Ever since their advent here, I may say, I have been one of their best +friends. Ah, sir, what charming people! excellent, and affable, and +devoted--" + +And at the remembrance of all his friends' good qualities, M. Courtois +choked in his utterance. + +"The Count de Tremorel," he resumed, "was a man of thirty-four years, +handsome, witty to the tips of his nails. He had sometimes, however, +periods of melancholy, during which he did not wish to see anybody; but +he was ordinarily so affable, so polite, so obliging; he knew so well +how to be noble without haughtiness, that everybody here esteemed and +loved him." + +"And the countess?" asked the judge of instruction. + +"An angel, Monsieur, an angel on earth! Poor lady! You will soon see her +remains, and surely you would not guess that she has been the queen of +the country, by reason of her beauty." + +"Were they rich?" + +"Yes; they must have had, together, more than a hundred thousand francs +income--oh, yes, much more; for within five or six months the count, who +had not the bucolic tastes of poor Sauvresy, sold some lands to buy +consols." + +"Have they been married long?" + +M. Courtois scratched his head; it was his appeal to memory. + +"Faith," he answered, "it was in September of last year; just six months +ago. I married them myself. Poor Sauvresy had been dead a year." + +The judge of instruction looked up from his notes with a surprised air. + +"Who is this Sauvresy," he inquired, "of whom you speak?" + +Papa Plantat, who was furiously biting his nails in a corner, apparently +a stranger to what was passing, rose abruptly. + +"Monsieur Sauvresy," said he, "was the first husband of Madame de +Tremorel. My friend Courtois has omitted this fact." + +"Oh!" said the mayor, in a wounded tone, "it seems to me that under +present circumstances--" + +"Pardon me," interrupted the judge. "It is a detail such as may well +become valuable, though apparently foreign to the case, and at the first +view, insignificant." + +"Hum!" grunted Papa Plantat. "Insignificant--foreign to it!" + +His tone was so singular, his air so strange, that M. Domini was struck +by it. + +"Do you share," he asked, "the opinion of the mayor regarding the +Tremorels?" + +Plantat shrugged his shoulders. + +"I haven't any opinions," he answered: "I live alone--see nobody; don't +disturb myself about anything. But--" + +"It seems to me," said M. Courtois, "that nobody should be better +acquainted with people who were my friends than I myself." + +"Then, you are telling the story clumsily," said M. Plantat, dryly. + +The judge of instruction pressed him to explain himself. So M. Plantat, +without more ado, to the great scandal of the mayor, who was thus put +into the background, proceeded to dilate upon the main features of the +count's and countess's biography. + +"The Countess de Tremorel, nee Bertha Lechaillu, was the daughter of a +poor village school-master. At eighteen, her beauty was famous for three +leagues around, but as she only had for dowry her great blue eyes and +blond ringlets, but few serious lovers presented themselves. Already +Bertha, by advice of her family, had resigned herself to take a place as +a governess--a sad position for so beautiful a maid--when the heir of +one of the richest domains in the neighborhood happened to see her, and +fell in love with her. + +"Clement Sauvresy was just thirty; he had no longer any family, and +possessed nearly a hundred thousand livres income from lands absolutely +free of incumbrance. Clearly, he had the best right in the world to +choose a wife to his taste. He did not hesitate. He asked for Bertha's +hand, won it, and, a month after, wedded her at mid-day, to the great +scandal of the neighboring aristocracy, who went about saying: 'What +folly! what good is there in being rich, if it is not to double one's +fortune by a good marriage!' + +"Nearly a month before the marriage, Sauvresy set the laborers to work +at Valfeuillu, and in no long time had spent, in repairs and furniture, +a trifle of thirty thousand crowns. The newly married pair chose this +beautiful spot in which to spend their honeymoon. They were so +well-contented there that they established themselves permanently at +Valfeuillu, to the great satisfaction of the neighborhood. + +"Bertha was one of those persons, it seemed, who are born especially to +marry millionnaires. Without awkwardness or embarrassment, she passed +easily from the humble school-room, where she had assisted her father, +to the splendid drawing-room of Valfeuillu. And when she did the honors +of her chateau to all the neighboring aristocracy, it seemed as though +she had never done anything else. She knew how to remain simple, +approachable, modest, all the while that she took the tone of the +highest society. She was beloved." + +"But it appears to me," interrupted the mayor, "that I said the same +thing, and it was really not worth while--" + +A gesture from M. Domini closed his mouth, and M. Plantat continued: + +"Sauvresy was also liked, for he was one of those golden hearts which +know not how to suspect evil. He was one of those men with a robust +faith, with obstinate illusions, whom doubts never disturb. He was one +of those who thoroughly confide in the sincerity of their friends, in +the love of their mistresses. This new domestic household ought to be +happy; it was so. Bertha adored her husband--that frank man, who, before +speaking to her a word of love, offered her his hand. Sauvresy professed +for his wife a worship which few thought foolish. They lived in great +style at Valfeuillu. They received a great deal. When autumn came all +the numerous spare chambers were filled. The turnouts were magnificent. + +"Sauvresy had been married two years, when one evening he brought from +Paris one of his old and intimate friends, a college comrade of whom he +had often spoken, Count Hector de Tremorel. The count intended to remain +but a short time at Valfeuillu; but weeks passed and then months, and he +still remained. It was not surprising. Hector had passed a very stormy +youth, full of debauchery, of clubs, of gambling, and of amours. He had +thrown to the winds of his caprices an immense fortune; the relatively +calm life of Valfeuillu was a relief. At first people said to him, 'You +will soon have enough of the country.' He smiled, but said nothing. It +was then thought, and rightly, perhaps, that having become poor, he +cared little to display his ruin before those who had obscured his +splendor. He absented himself rarely, and then only to go to Corbeil, +almost always on foot. There he frequented the Belle Image hotel, the +best in the town, and met, as if by chance, a young lady from Paris. +They spent the afternoon together, and separated when the last train +left." + +"Peste!" growled the mayor, "for a man who lives alone, who sees nobody, +who would not for the world have anything to do with other people's +business, it seems to me our dear Monsieur Plantat is pretty well +informed." + +Evidently M. Courtois was jealous. How was it that he, the first +personage in the place, had been absolutely ignorant of these meetings? +His ill-humor was increasing, when Dr. Gendron answered: + +"Pah! all Corbeil prated about that at the time." + +M. Plantat made a movement with his lips as if to say, "I know other +things besides." He went on, however, with his story. + +"The visit of Count Hector made no change in the habits at the chateau. +Monsieur and Madame Sauvresy had a brother; that was all. Sauvresy at +this time made several journeys to Paris, where, as everybody knew, he +was engaged in arranging his friend's affairs. + +"This charming existence lasted a year. Happiness seemed to be fixed +forever beneath the delightful shades of Valfeuillu. But alas! one +evening on returning from the hunt, Sauvresy became so ill that he was +forced to take to his bed. A doctor was called; inflammation of the +chest had set in. Sauvresy was young, vigorous as an oak; his state did +not at first cause anxiety. A fortnight afterward, in fact, he was up +and about. But he was imprudent and had a relapse. He again nearly +recovered; a week afterward there was another relapse, and this time so +serious, that a fatal end of his illness was foreseen. During this long +sickness, the love of Bertha and the affection of Tremorel for Sauvresy +were tenderly shown. Never was an invalid tended with such +solicitude--surrounded with so many proofs of the purest devotion. His +wife and his friend were always at his couch, night and day. He had +hours of suffering, but never a second of weariness. He repeated to all +who went to see him, that he had come to bless his illness. He said to +himself, 'If I had not fallen ill, I should never have known how much I +was beloved.'" + +"He said the same thing to me," interrupted the mayor, "more than a +hundred times. He also said so to Madame Courtois, to Laurence, my +eldest daughter--" + +"Naturally," continued M. Plantat. "But Sauvresy's distemper was one +against which the science of the most skilful physicians and the most +constant care contend in vain. + +"He said that he did not suffer much, but he faded perceptibly, and was +no more than the shadow of his former self. At last, one night, toward +two or three o'clock, he died in the arms of his wife and his friend. Up +to the last moment, he had preserved the full force of his faculties. +Less than an hour before expiring, he wished everyone to be awakened, +and that all the servants of the castle should be summoned. When they +were all gathered about the bedside, he took his wife's hand, placed it +in that of the Count de Tremorel, and made them swear to marry each +other when he was no more. Bertha and Hector began to protest, but he +insisted in such a manner as to compel assent, praying and adjuring +them, and declaring that their refusal would embitter his last moments. +This idea of the marriage between his widow and his friend seems, +besides, to have singularly possessed his thoughts toward the close of +his life. In the preamble of his will, dictated the night before his +death, to M. Bury, notary of Orcival, he says formally that their union +is his dearest wish, certain as he is of their happiness, and knowing +well that his memory will be piously kept." + +"Had Monsieur and Madame Sauvresy no children?" asked the judge of +instruction. + +"No," answered the mayor. + +M. Plantat continued: + +"The grief of the count and the young widow was intense. M. de Tremorel, +especially, seemed absolutely desperate, and acted like a madman. The +countess shut herself up, forbidding even those whom she loved best from +entering her chamber--even Madame Courtois. When the count and Madame +Bertha reappeared, they were scarcely to be recognized, so much had both +changed. Monsieur Hector seemed to have grown twenty years older. Would +they keep the oath made at the death-bed of Sauvresy, of which everyone +was apprised? This was asked with all the more curiosity, because their +profound sorrow for a man who well merited it, was admired." + +The judge of instruction stopped M. Plantat with a motion of his hand. + +"Do you know," asked he, "whether the rendezvous at the Hotel Belle +Image had ceased?" + +"I suppose so, sir; I think so." + +"I am almost sure of it," said Dr. Gendron. "I have often heard it +said--they know everything at Corbeil--that there was a heated +explanation between M. de Tremorel and the pretty Parisian lady. After +this quarrel, they were no longer seen at the Belle Image." + +The old justice of the peace smiled. + +"Melun is not at the end of the world," said he, "and there are hotels +at Melun. With a good horse, one is soon at Fontainebleau, at +Versailles, even at Paris. Madame de Tremorel might have been jealous; +her husband had some first-rate trotters in his stables." + +Did M. Plantat give an absolutely disinterested opinion, or did he make +an insinuation? The judge of instruction looked at him attentively, to +reassure himself, but his visage expressed nothing but a profound +serenity. He told the story as he would any other, no matter what. + +"Please go on, Monsieur," resumed M. Domini. + +"Alas!" said M. Plantat, "nothing here below is eternal, not even grief. +I know it better than anybody. Soon, to the tears of the first days, to +violent despair, there succeeded, in the count and Madame Bertha, a +reasonable sadness, then a soft melancholy. And in one year after +Sauvresy's death Monsieur de Tremorel espoused his widow." + +During this long narrative the mayor had several times exhibited marks +of impatience. At the end, being able to hold in no longer, he +exclaimed: + +"There, those are surely exact details; but I question whether they have +advanced us a step in this grave matter which occupies us all--to find +the murderers of the count and countess." + +M. Plantat, at these words, bent on the judge of instruction his clear +and deep look, as if to search his conscience to the bottom. + +"These details were indispensable," returned M. Domini, "and they are +very clear. Those rendezvous at the hotel struck me; one knows not to +what extremities jealousy might lead a woman--" + +He stopped abruptly, seeking, no doubt, some connection between the +pretty Parisian and the murderers; then resumed: + +"Now that I know the Tremorels as if I had lived with them intimately, +let us proceed to the actual facts." + +The brilliant eye of M. Plantat immediately grew dim; he opened his lips +as if to speak; but kept his peace. The doctor alone, who had not ceased +to study the old justice of the peace, remarked the sudden change of his +features. + +"It only remains," said M. Domini, "to know how the new couple lived." + +M. Courtois thought it due to his dignity to anticipate M. Plantat. + +"You ask how the new couple lived," said he hastily; "they lived in +perfect concord; nobody knows better about it than I, who was most +intimate with them. The memory of poor Sauvresy was a bond of happiness +between them; if they liked me so well, it was because I often talked of +him. Never a cloud, never a cross word. Hector--I called him so, +familiarly, this poor, dear count--gave his wife the tender attentions +of a lover; those delicate cares, which I fear most married people soon +dispense with." + +"And the countess?" asked M. Plantat, in a tone too marked not to be +ironical. + +"Bertha?" replied the worthy mayor--"she permitted me to call her thus, +paternally--I have cited her many and many a time as an example and +model, to Madame Courtois. She was worthy of Hector and of Sauvresy, the +two most worthy men I have ever met!" + +Then, perceiving that his enthusiasm somewhat surprised his hearers, he +added, more softly: + +"I have my reasons for expressing myself thus; and I do not hesitate to +do so before men whose profession and character will justify my +discretion. Sauvresy, when living, did me a great service--when I was +forced to take the mayoralty. As for Hector, I knew well that he had +departed--from the dissipations of his youth, and thought I discerned +that he was not indifferent to my eldest daughter, Laurence; and I +dreamed of a marriage all the more proper, as, if the Count Hector had a +great name, I would give to my daughter a dowry large enough to gild any +escutcheon. Only events modified my projects." + +The mayor would have gone on singing the praises of the Tremorels, and +his own family, if the judge of instruction had not interposed. + +"Here I am fixed," he commenced, "now, it seems to me--" + +He was interrupted by a loud noise in the vestibule. It seemed like a +struggle, and cries and shouts reached the drawing-room. Everybody rose. + +"I know what it is," said the mayor, "only too well. They have just +found the body of the Count de Tremorel." + + + + +IV + + +The mayor was mistaken. The drawing-room door opened suddenly, and a man +of slender form, who was struggling furiously, and with an energy which +would not have been suspected, appeared, held on one side by a gendarme, +and on the other by a domestic. + +The struggle had already lasted long, and his clothes were in great +disorder. His new coat was torn, his cravat floated in strips, the +button of his collar had been wrenched off, and his open shirt left his +breast bare. In the vestibule and court were heard the frantic cries of +the servants and the curious crowd--of whom there were more than a +hundred, whom the news of the crime had collected about the gate, and +who burned to hear, and above all to see. + +This enraged crowd cried: + +"It is he! Death to the assassin! It is Guespin! See him!" + +And the wretch, inspired by an immense fright, continued to struggle. + +"Help!" shouted he hoarsely. "Leave me alone. I am innocent!" + +He had posted himself against the drawing-room door, and they could not +force him forward. + +"Push him," ordered the mayor, "push him." + +It was easier to command than to execute. Terror lent to Guespin +enormous force. But it occurred to the doctor to open the second wing of +the door; the support failed the wretch, and he fell, or rather rolled +at the foot of the table at which the judge of instruction was seated. +He was straightway on his feet again, and his eyes sought a chance to +escape. Seeing none--for the windows and doors were crowded with the +lookers-on--he fell into a chair. The fellow appeared the image of +terror, wrought up to paroxysm. On his livid face, black and blue, were +visible the marks of the blows he had received in the struggle; his +white lips trembled, and he moved his jaws as if he sought a little +saliva for his burning tongue; his staring eyes were bloodshot, and +expressed the wildest distress; his body was bent with convulsive +spasms. So terrible was this spectacle, that the mayor thought it might +be an example of great moral force. He turned toward the crowd, and +pointing to Guespin, said in a tragic tone: + +"See what crime is!" + +The others exchanged surprised looks. + +"If he is guilty," muttered M. Plantat, "why on earth has he returned?" + +It was with difficulty that the crowd was kept back; the brigadier was +forced to call in the aid of his men. Then he returned and placed +himself beside Guespin, thinking it not prudent to leave him alone with +unarmed men. + +But the man was little to be feared. The reaction came; his over-excited +energy became exhausted, his strained muscles flaccid, and his +prostration resembled the agony of brain fever. Meanwhile the brigadier +recounted what had happened. + +"Some of the servants of the chateau and the neighboring houses were +chatting near the gate, about the crime, and the disappearance of +Guespin last night, when all of a sudden, someone perceived him at a +distance, staggering, and singing boisterously, as if he were drunk." + +"Was he really drunk?" asked M. Domini. + +"Very," returned the brigadier. + +"Then we owe it to the wine that we have caught him, and thus all will +be explained." + +"On perceiving this wretch," pursued the gendarme, who seemed not to +have the shadow of a doubt of Guespin's guilt, "Francois, the count's +valet de chambre, and Baptiste, the mayor's servant, who were there, +hastened to meet him, and seized him. He was so tipsy that he thought +they were fooling with him. When he saw my men, he was undeceived. Just +then one of the women cried out, 'Brigand, it was you who have this +night assassinated the count and the countess!' He immediately became +paler than death, and remained motionless and dumb. Then he began to +struggle so violently that he nearly escaped. Ah! he's strong, the +rogue, although he does not look like it." + +"And he said nothing?" said Plantat. + +"Not a word; his teeth were so tightly shut with rage that I'm sure he +couldn't say 'bread.' But we've got him. I've searched him, and this is +what I have found in his pockets: a handkerchief, a pruning-knife, two +small keys, a scrap of paper covered with figures, and an address of the +establishment of 'Vulcan's Forges.' But that's not all--" + +The brigadier took a step, and eyed his auditors mysteriously; he was +preparing his effect. + +"That's not all. While they were bringing him along in the court-yard, +he tried to get rid of his wallet. Happily I had my eyes open, and saw +the dodge. I picked up the wallet, which he had thrown among the flowers +near the door; here it is. In it are a one-hundred-franc note, three +napoleons, and seven francs in change. Yesterday the rascal hadn't a +sou--" + +"How do you know that?" asked M. Domini. + +"Dame! Monsieur Judge, he borrowed of the valet Francois (who told me of +it) twenty-five francs, pretending that it was to pay his share of the +wedding expenses." + +"Tell Francois to come here," said the judge of instruction. "Now, sir," +he continued, when the valet presented himself, "do you know whether +Guespin had any money yesterday?" + +"He had so little, Monsieur," answered Francois promptly, "that he asked +me to lend him twenty-five francs during the day, saying that otherwise +he could not go to the wedding, not having enough even to pay his +railway fare." + +"But he might have some savings--a hundred-franc note, for instance, +which he didn't like to change." + +Francois shook his head with an incredulous smile. + +"Guespin isn't the man to have savings," said he; "Women and cards +exhaust all his wages. No longer ago than last week, the keeper of the +Cafe du Commerce came here and made a row on account of what he owed +him, and threatened to go to the count about it." + +Perceiving the effect of what he said, the valet, as if to correct +himself, hastened to add: + +"I have no ill-will toward Guespin; before to-day I've always considered +him a clever fellow, though he was too much of a practical joker; he +was, perhaps, a little proud, considering his bringing up--" + +"You may go," said the judge, cutting the disquisition of M. Francois +short; the valet retired. + +During this colloquy, Guespin had little by little come to himself. The +judge of instruction, Plantat, and the mayor narrowly watched the play +of his countenance, which he had not the coolness to compose, while the +doctor held his pulse and counted its beating. + +"Remorse, and fear of punishment," muttered the mayor. + +"Innocence, and the impossibility of proving it," responded Plantat in a +low tone. + +M. Domini heard both these exclamations, but did not appear to take +notice of them. His opinion was not formed, and he did not wish that +anyone should be able to foretell, by any word of his, what it would be. + +"Are you better, my friend?" asked Dr. Gendron, of Guespin. + +The poor fellow made an affirmative sign. Then, having looked around +with the anxious glance of a man who calculates a precipice over which +he has fallen, he passed his hand across his eyes and stammered: + +"Something to drink!" + +A glass of water was brought, and he drank it at a draught, with an +expression of intense satisfaction. Then he got upon his feet. + +"Are you now in a fit state to answer me?" asked the judge. + +Guespin staggered a little, then drew himself up. He continued erect +before the judge, supporting himself against a table. The nervous +trembling of his hands diminished, the blood returned to his cheeks, and +as he listened, he arranged the disorder of his clothes. + +"You know the events of this night, don't you?" commenced the judge; +"the Count and Countess de Tremorel have been murdered. You went away +yesterday with all the servants of the chateau; you left them at the +Lyons station about nine o'clock; you have just returned, alone. Where +have you passed the night?" + +Guespin hung his head and remained silent. + +"That is not all," continued M. Domini; "yesterday you had no money, the +fact is well known; one of your fellow-servants has just proved it. +To-day, one hundred and sixty-seven francs are found in your wallet. +Where did you get this money?" + +The unhappy creature's lip moved as if he wished to answer; a sudden +thought seemed to check him, for he did not speak. + +"More yet. What is this card of a hardware establishment that has been +found in your pocket?" + +Guespin made a sign of desperation, and stammered: + +"I am innocent." + +"I have not as yet accused you," said the judge of instruction, quickly. +"You knew, perhaps, that the count received a considerable sum +yesterday?" + +A bitter smile parted Guespin's lips as he answered: + +"I know well enough that everything is against me." + +There was a profound silence. The doctor, the mayor, and Plantat, seized +with a keen curiosity, dared not move. Perhaps nothing in the world is +more thrilling than one of these merciless duels between justice and a +man suspected of a crime. The questions may seem insignificant, the +answers irrelevant; both questions and answers envelop terrible, hidden +meanings. The smallest gesture, the most rapid movement of physiognomy +may acquire deep significance, a fugitive light in the eye betray an +advantage gained; an imperceptible change in the voice may be +confession. + +The coolness of M. Domini was disheartening. + +"Let us see," said he after a pause: "where did you pass the night? How +did you get this money? And what does this address mean?" + +"Eh!" cried Guespin, with the rage of powerlessness, "I should tell you +what you would not believe." + +The judge was about to ask another question, but Guespin cut him short. + +"No; you wouldn't believe me," he repeated, his eyes glistening with +anger. "Do men like you believe men like me? I have a past, you know, of +antecedents, as you would say. The past! They throw that in my face, as +if, the future depended on the past. Well, yes; it's true, I'm a +debauchee, a gambler, a drunkard, an idler, but what of it? It's true I +have been before the police court, and condemned for night +poaching--what does that prove? I have wasted my life, but whom have I +wronged if not myself? My past! Have I not sufficiently expiated it?" + +Guespin was self-possessed, and finding in himself sensations which +awoke a sort of eloquence, he expressed himself with a savage energy +well calculated to strike his hearers. + +"I have not always served others," he continued; "my father was in easy +circumstances--almost rich. He had large gardens, near Saumur, and he +passed for one of the best gardeners of that region. I was educated, and +when sixteen years old, began to study law. Four years later they +thought me a talented youth. Unhappily for me, my father died. He left +me a landed property worth a hundred thousand francs: I sold it out for +sixty thousand and went to Paris. I was a fool then. I had the fever of +pleasure-seeking, a thirst for all sorts of pastimes, perfect health, +plenty of money. I found Paris a narrow limit for my vices; it seemed to +me that the objects of my desires were wanting. I thought my sixty +thousand francs would last forever." + +Guespin paused; a thousand memories of those times rushed into his +thoughts and he muttered: + +"Those were good times." + +"My sixty thousand francs," he resumed, "held out eight years. Then I +hadn't a sou, yet I longed to continue my way of living. You understand, +don't you? About this time, the police, one night, arrested me. I was +'detained' six months. You will find the records of the affair at the +prefecture. Do you know what it will tell you? It will tell you that on +leaving prison I fell into that shameful and abominable misery which +exists in Paris. It will tell you that I have lived among the worst and +lowest outcasts of Paris--and it is the truth." + +The worthy mayor was filled with consternation. + +"Good Heaven!" thought he, "what an audacious and cynical rascal! and to +think that one is liable at any time to admit such servants into his +house!" + +The judge held his tongue. He knew that Guespin was in such a state +that, under the irresistible impulse of passion, he might betray his +innermost thoughts. + +"But there is one thing," continued the suspected man, "that the record +will not tell you; that, disgusted with this abject life, I was tempted +to suicide. It will not tell you anything of my desperate attempts, my +repentance, my relapses. At last, I was able in part to reform. I got +work; and after being in four situations, engaged myself here. I found +myself well off. I always spent my month's wages in advance, it's +true--but what would you have? And ask if anyone has ever had to +complain of me." + +It is well known that among the most intelligent criminals, those who +have had a certain degree of education, and enjoyed some good fortune, +are the most redoubtable. According to this, Guespin was decidedly +dangerous. So thought those who heard him. Meanwhile, exhausted by his +excitement, he paused and wiped his face, covered with perspiration. + +M. Domini had not lost sight of his plan of attack. + +"All that is very well," said he, "we will return to your confession at +the proper time and place. But just now the question is, how you spent +your night, and where you got this money." + +This persistency seemed to exasperate Guespin. + +"Eh!" cried he, "how do you want me to answer? The truth? You wouldn't +credit it. As well keep silent. It is a fatality." + +"I warn you for your own sake," resumed the judge, "that if you persist +in refusing to answer, the charges which weigh upon you are such that I +will have you arrested as suspected of this murder." + +This menace seemed to have a remarkable effect on Guespin. Great tears +filled his eyes, up to that time dry and flashing, and silently rolled +down his cheeks. His energy was exhausted; he fell on his knees, crying: + +"Mercy! I beg you, Monsieur, not to arrest me; I swear I am innocent, I +swear it!" + +"Speak, then." + +"You wish it," said Guespin, rising. Then he suddenly changed his tone. +"No, I will not speak, I cannot! One man alone could save me; it is the +count; and he is dead. I am innocent; yet if the guilty are not found, I +am lost. Everything is against me. I know it too well. Now, do with me +as you please; I will not say another word." + +Guespin's determination, confirmed by his look, did not surprise the +judge. + +"You will reflect," said he, quietly, "only, when you have reflected, I +shall not have the same confidence in what you say as I should have now. +Possibly," and the judge spoke slowly and with emphasis, "you have only +had an indirect part in this crime; if so--" + +"Neither indirect nor direct," interrupted Guespin; and he added, +violently, "what misery! To be innocent, and not able to defend myself." + +"Since it is so," resumed M. Domini, "you should not object to be placed +before Mme. de Tremorel's body?" + +The accused did not seem affected by this menace. He was conducted into +the hall whither they had fetched the countess. There, he examined the +body with a cold and calm eye. He said, simply: + +"She is happier than I; she is dead, she suffers no longer; and I, who +am not guilty, am accused of her death." + +M. Domini made one more effort. + +"Come, Guespin; if in any way you know of this crime, I conjure you, +tell me. If you know the murderers, name them. Try to merit some +indulgence for your frankness and repentance." + +Guespin made a gesture as if resigned to persecution. "By all that is +most sacred," he answered, "I am innocent. Yet I see clearly that if the +murderer is not found, I am lost." + +Little by little M. Domini's conviction was formed and confirmed. An +inquest of this sort is not so difficult as may be imagined. The +difficulty is to seize at the beginning; in the entangled skein, the +main thread, which must lead to the truth through all the mazes, the +ruses, silence, falsehoods of the guilty. M. Domini was certain that he +held this precious thread. Having one of the assassins, he knew well +that he would secure the others. Our prisons, where good soup is eaten, +and good beds are provided, have tongues, as well as the dungeons of the +medieval ages. + +The judge ordered the brigadier to arrest Guespin, and told him not to +lose sight of him. He then sent for old Bertaud. This worthy personage +was not one of the people who worry themselves. He had had so many +affairs with the men of law, that one inquisition the more disturbed him +little. + +"This man has a bad reputation in my commune," whispered the mayor to M. +Domini. + +Bertaud heard it, however, and smiled. + +Questioned by the judge of instruction, he recounted very clearly and +exactly what had happened in the morning, his resistance, and his son's +determination. He explained the reason for the falsehood they told; and +here again the chapter of antecedents came up. + +"Look here; I'm better than my reputation, after all," said he. "There +are many folks who can't say as much. You see many things when you go +about at night--enough." + +He was urged to explain his allusions, but in vain. + +When he was asked where and how he had passed the night, he answered, +that having left the cabaret at ten o'clock, he went to put down some +traps in Mauprevoir wood; and had gone home and to bed about one +o'clock. + +"By the bye," added he, "there ought to be some game in those traps by +this time." + +"Can you bring a witness to prove that you went home at one?" asked the +mayor, who bethought him of the count's clock, stopped at twenty minutes +past three. + +"Don't know, I'm sure," carelessly responded the poacher, "it's quite +likely that my son didn't wake up when I went to bed." + +He added, seeing the judge reflect: + +"I suspect that you are going to imprison me until the murderers are +discovered. If it was winter, I wouldn't complain much; a fellow is well +off in prison then, for it's warm there. But just at the time for +hunting, it's provoking. It will be a good lesson for that Philippe; +it'll teach him what it costs to render a service to gentlefolks." + +"Enough!" interrupted M. Domini, sternly. "Do you know Guespin?" + +This name suddenly subdued the careless insolence of the marauder; his +little gray eyes experienced a singular restlessness. + +"Certainly," he answered in an embarrassed tone, "we have often made a +party at cards, you understand, while sipping our 'gloria.'"* + +[* Coffee and brandy.] + +The man's inquietude struck the four who heard him. Plantat, especially, +betrayed profound surprise. The old vagabond was too shrewd not to +perceive the effect which he produced. + +"Faith, so much the worse!" cried he: "I'll tell you everything. Every +man for himself, isn't it? If Guespin has done the deed, it will not +blacken him any more, nor make him any the worse off. I know him, simply +because he used to sell me the grapes and strawberries from the count's +conservatories; I suppose he stole them; we divided the money, and I +left." + +Plantat could not refrain from an exclamation of satisfaction, as if to +say, "Good luck! I knew it well enough!" + +When he said he would be sent to prison, Bertaud was not wrong. The +judge ordered his arrest. + +It was now Philippe's turn. + +The poor fellow was in a pitiable state; he was crying bitterly. + +"To accuse me of such a crime, me!" he kept repeating. + +On being questioned he told the pure and simple truth, excusing himself, +however, for having dared to penetrate into the park. When he was asked +at what hour his father reached home, he said he knew nothing about it; +he had gone to bed about nine, and had not awoke until morning. He knew +Guespin, from having seen him at his father's several times. He knew +that the old man had some transactions with the gardener, but he was +ignorant as to what they were. He had never spoken four times to +Guespin. The judge ordered Philippe to be set at liberty, not that he +was wholly convinced of his innocence, but because if the crime had been +committed by several persons, it was well to have one of them free; he +could be watched, and he would betray the whereabouts of the rest. + +Meanwhile the count's body was nowhere to be found. The park had been +rigidly searched, but in vain. The mayor suggested that he had been +thrown into the river, which was also M. Domini's opinion; and some +fishermen were sent to drag the Seine, commencing their search a little +above the place where the countess was found. + +It was then nearly three o'clock. M. Plantat remarked that probably no +one had eaten anything during the day. Would it not be wise to take +something, he suggested, if the investigations were to be pursued till +night? This appeal to the trivial necessities of our frail humanity +highly displeased the worthy mayor; but the rest readily assented to the +suggestion, and M. Courtois, though not in the least hungry, followed +the general example. Around the table which was yet wet with the wine +spilt by the assassins, the judge, M. Plantat, the mayor, and the doctor +sat down, and partook of an improvised collation. + + + + +V + + +The staircase had been put under guard, but the vestibule had remained +free. People were heard coming and going, tramping and coughing; then +rising above this continuous noise, the oaths of the gendarmes trying to +keep back the crowd. From time to time, a scared face passed by the +dining-room door, which was ajar. These were curious folks who, more +daring than the rest, wished to see the "men of justice" eating, and +tried to hear a word or two, to report them, and so become important in +the eyes of the others. But the "men of justice"--as they said at +Orcival--took care to say nothing of moment while the doors were open, +and while a servant was passing to and fro. Greatly moved by this +frightful crime, disturbed by the mystery which surrounded it, they hid +their impressions. Each, on his part, studied the probability of his +suspicions, and kept his opinion to himself. + +M. Domini, as he ate, put his notes in order, numbering the leaves, +marking certain peculiarly significant answers of the suspected persons +with a cross. He was, perhaps, the least tormented of the four +companions at this funereal repast. The crime did not seem to him one of +those which keep judges of instruction sleepless through the night; he +saw clearly the motive of it; and he had Bertaud and Guespin, two of the +assassins, or at least accomplices, secure. + +M. Plantat and Dr. Gendron, seated next each other, were talking of the +illness which carried off Sauvresy. M. Courtois listened to the hubbub +without. + +The news of the double murder was soon noised about the neighborhood, +and the crowd increased every minute. It filled the court, and became +bolder and bolder; the gendarmes were overwhelmed. Then or never was the +time for the mayor to show his authority. "I am going to make these +people listen to reason," said he, "and make them retire." And at once, +wiping his mouth, he threw his tumbled napkin on the table, and went +out. + +It was time. The brigadier's injunctions were no longer heeded. Some +curious people, more eager than the rest, had flanked the position and +were forcing an entrance through the gate leading to the garden. The +mayor's presence did not perhaps intimidate the crowd much, but it +redoubled the energy of the gendarmes; the vestibule was cleared, amid +murmurings against the arm of the law. What a chance for a speech! M. +Courtois was not wanting to the occasion. He believed that his +eloquence, endowed with the virtues of a cold showerbath, would calm +this unwonted effervescence of his constituency. He stepped forward upon +the steps, his left hand resting in the opening of his vest, gesturing +with his right in the proud and impassible attitude which the sculptor +lends to great orators. It was thus that he posed before his council +when, finding unexpected opposition, he undertook to impose his will +upon them, and recall the recalcitrant members to their duty. + +His speech, in fragments, penetrated to the dining-room. According as he +turned to the right or to the left, his voice was clear and distinct, or +was lost in space. He said: + +"Fellow-citizens, an atrocious crime, unheard of before in our commune, +has shocked our peaceable and honest neighborhood. I understand and +excuse your feverish emotion, your natural indignation. As well as you, +my friends, more than you--I cherished and esteemed the noble Count de +Tremorel, and his virtuous wife. We mourn them together--" + +"I assure you," said Dr. Gendron to M. Plantat, "that the symptoms you +describe are not uncommon after pleurisy. From the acute state, the +inflammation passes to the chronic state, and becomes complicated with +pneumonia." + +"But nothing," pursued the mayor, "can justify a curiosity, which by its +importunate attempts to be satisfied, embarrasses the investigation, and +is, at all events, a punishable interference with the cause of justice. +Why this unwonted gathering? Why these rumors and noises? These +premature conjectures?" + +"There were several consultations," said M. Plantat, "which did not have +favorable results. Sauvresy suffered altogether strange and +unaccountable tortures. He complained of troubles so unwonted, so +absurd, if you'll excuse the word, that he discouraged all the +conjectures of the most experienced physicians." + +"Was it not R---, of Paris, who attended him?" + +"Exactly. He came daily, and often remained overnight. Many times I have +seen him ascending the principal street of the village, with troubled +countenance, as he went to give his prescription to the apothecary. + +"Be wise enough," cried M. Courtois, "to moderate your just anger; be +calm; be dignified." + +"Surely," continued Dr. Gendron, "your apothecary is an intelligent man; +but you have at Orcival a fellow who quite outdoes him, a fellow who +knows how to make money; one Robelot--" + +"Robelot, the bone-setter?" + +"That's the man. I suspect him of giving consultations, and prescribing +sub rosa. He is very clever. In fact I educated him. Five or six years +ago, he was my laboratory boy, and even now I employ him when I have a +delicate operation on hand--" + +The doctor stopped, struck by the alteration in the impassible Plantat's +features. + +"What is the matter, my friend?" he asked. "Are you ill?" + +The judge left his notes, to look at him. "Why," said he, "Monsieur +Plantat is very pale--" + +But M. Plantat speedily resumed his habitual expression. + +"'Tis nothing," he answered, "really nothing. With my abominable +stomach, as soon as I change my hour of eating--" + +Having reached his peroration, M. Courtois raised his voice. + +"Return," said he, "to your peaceable homes, your quiet avocations. Rest +assured the law protects you. Already justice has begun its work; two of +the criminals are in its power, and we are on the track of their +accomplices." + +"Of all the servants of the chateau," remarked M. Plantat, "there +remains not one who knew Sauvresy. The domestics have one by one been +replaced." + +"No doubt," answered the doctor, "the sight of the old servants would be +disagreeable to Monsieur de Tremorel." + +He was interrupted by the mayor, who re-entered, his eyes glowing, his +face animated, wiping his forehead. + +"I have let the people know," said he, "the indecency of their +curiosity. They have all gone away. They were anxious to get at Philippe +Bertaud, the brigadier says; public opinion has a sharp scent." + +Hearing the door open, he turned, and found himself face to face with a +man whose features were scarcely visible, so profoundly did he bow, his +hat pressed against his breast. + +"What do you wish?" sternly asked M. Courtois. "By what right have you +come in here?--Who are you?" + +The man drew himself up. + +"I am Monsieur Lecoq," he replied, with a gracious smile. "Monsieur +Lecoq of the detective force, sent by the prefect of police in reply to +a telegram, for this affair." + +This declaration clearly surprised all present, even the judge of +instruction. + +In France, each profession has its special externals, as it were, +insignia, which betray it at first view. Each profession has its +conventional type, and when public opinion has adopted a type, it does +not admit it possible that the type should be departed from. What is a +doctor? A grave man, all in black, with a white cravat. A gentleman with +a capacious stomach, adorned with heavy gold seals, can only be a +banker. Everybody knows that the artist is a merry liver, with a peaked +hat, a velvet vest, and enormous ruffles. By virtue of this rule, the +detective of the prefecture ought to have an eye full of mystery, +something suspicious about him, a negligence of dress, and imitation +jewelry. The most obtuse shopkeeper is sure that he can scent a +detective at twenty paces a big man with mustaches, and a shining felt +hat, his throat imprisoned by a collar of hair, dressed in a black, +threadbare surtout, carefully buttoned up on account of the entire +absence of linen. Such is the type. But, according to this, M. Lecoq, as +he entered the dining-room at Valfeuillu, had by no means the air of a +detective. True, M. Lecoq can assume whatever air he pleases. His +friends declare that he has a physiognomy peculiar to himself, which he +resumes when he enters his own house, and which he retains by his own +fireside, with his slippers on; but the fact is not well proved. What is +certain, is that his mobile face lends itself to strange metamorphoses; +that he moulds his features according to his will, as the sculptor +moulds clay for modelling. He changes everything, even his look. + +"So," said the judge of instruction, "the prefect has sent you to me, in +case certain investigations become necessary." + +"Yes, Monsieur, quite at your service." + +M. Lecoq had on this day assumed a handsome wig of lank hair, of that +vague color called Paris blonde, parted on the side by a line +pretentiously fanciful; whiskers of the same color puffed out with bad +pomade, encircled a pallid face. His big eyes seemed congealed within +their red border, an open smile rested on his thick lips, which, in +parting, discovered a range of long yellow teeth. His face, otherwise, +expressed nothing in particular. It was a nearly equal mixture of +timidity, self-sufficiency, and contentment. It was quite impossible to +concede the least intelligence to the possessor of such a phiz. One +involuntarily looked for a goitre. The retail haberdashers, who, having +cheated for thirty years in their threads and needles, retire with large +incomes, should have such heads as this. His apparel was as dull as his +person. His coat resembled all coats, his trousers all trousers. A hair +chain, the same color as his whiskers, was attached to a large silver +watch, which bulged out his left waistcoat pocket. While speaking, he +fumbled with a confection-box made of transparent horn, full of little +square lozenges, and adorned by a portrait of a very homely, +well-dressed woman--"the defunct," no doubt. As the conversation +proceeded, according as he was satisfied or disturbed, M. Lecoq munched +a lozenge, or directed glances toward the portrait which were quite a +poem in themselves. + +Having examined the man a long time, the judge of instruction shrugged +his shoulders. "Well," said M. Domini, finally, "now that you are here, +we will explain to you what has occurred." + +"Oh, that's quite useless," responded Lecoq, with a satisfied air, +"perfectly useless, sir." + +"Nevertheless, it is necessary that you should know--" + +"What? that which monsieur the judge knows?" interrupted the detective, +"for that I already know. Let us agree there has been a murder, with +theft as its motive; and start from that point. The countess's body has +been found--not so that of the count. What else? Bertaud, an +acknowledged rogue, is arrested; he merits a little punishment, +doubtless. Guespin came back drunk; ah, there are sad charges against +this Guespin! His past is deplorable; it is not known where he passed +the night, he refuses to answer, he brings no alibi--this is indeed +grave!" + +M. Plantat gazed at the detective with visible pleasure. + +"Who has told you about these things?" asked M. Domini. + +"Well--everybody has told me a little." + +"But where?" + +"Here: I've already been here two hours, and even heard the mayor's +speech." + +And, satisfied with the effect he had produced, M. Lecoq munched a +lozenge. + +"You were not aware, then," resumed the judge, "that I was waiting for +you?" + +"Pardon me," said the detective; "I hope you will be kind enough to hear +me. You see, it is indispensable to study the ground; one must look +about, establish his batteries. I am anxious to catch the general +rumor--public opinion, as they say, so as to distrust it." + +"All this," answered M. Domini, severely, "does not justify your delay." + +M. Lecoq glanced tenderly at the portrait. + +"Monsieur the judge," said he, "has only to inquire at the prefecture, +and he will learn that I know my profession. The great thing requisite, +in order to make an effective search, is to remain unknown. The police +are not popular. Now, if they knew who I was, and why I was here, I +might go out, but nobody would tell me anything; I might ask +questions--they'd serve me a hundred lies; they would distrust me, and +hold their tongues." + +"Quite true--quite true," murmured Plantat, coming to the support of the +detective. + +M. Lecoq went on: + +"So that when I was told that I was going into the country, I put on my +country face and clothes. I arrive here and everybody, on seeing me, +says to himself, 'Here's a curious bumpkin, but not a bad fellow.' Then +I slip about, listen, talk, make the rest talk! I ask this question and +that, and am answered frankly; I inform myself, gather hints, no one +troubles himself about me. These Orcival folks are positively charming; +why, I've already made several friends, and am invited to dine this very +evening." + +M. Domini did not like the police, and scarcely concealed it. He rather +submitted to their co-operation than accepted it, solely because he +could not do without them. While listening to M. Lecoq, he could not but +approve of what he said; yet he looked at him with an eye by no means +friendly. + +"Since you know so much about the matter," observed he, dryly, "we will +proceed to examine the scene of the crime." + +"I am quite at Monsieur the judge's orders," returned the detective, +laconically. As everyone was getting up, he took the opportunity to +offer M. Plantat his lozenge-box. + +"Monsieur perhaps uses them?" + +Plantat, unwilling to decline, appropriated a lozenge, and the +detective's face became again serene. Public sympathy was necessary to +him, as it is to all great comedians. + + + + +VI + + +M. Lecoq was the first to reach the staircase, and the spots of blood at +once caught his eye. + +"Oh," cried he, at each spot he saw, "oh, oh, the wretches!" + +M. Courtois was much moved to find so much sensibility in a detective. +The latter, as he continued to ascend, went on: + +"The wretches! They don't often leave traces like this everywhere--or at +least they wipe them out." + +On gaining the first landing, and the door of the boudoir which led into +the chamber, he stopped, eagerly scanning, before he entered, the +position of the rooms. + +Then he entered the boudoir, saying: + +"Come; I don't see my way clear yet." + +"But it seems to me," remarked the judge, "that we have already +important materials to aid your task. It is clear that Guespin, if he is +not an accomplice, at least knew something about the crime." + +M. Lecoq had recourse to the portrait in the lozenge-box. It was more +than a glance, it was a confidence. He evidently said something to the +dear defunct, which he dared not say aloud. + +"I see that Guespin is seriously compromised," resumed he. "Why didn't +he want to tell where he passed the night? But, then, public opinion is +against him, and I naturally distrust that." + +The detective stood alone in the middle of the room, the rest, at his +request, remained at the threshold, and looking keenly about him, +searched for some explanation of the frightful disorder of the +apartment. + +"Fools!" cried he, in an irritated tone, "double brutes! Because they +murder people so as to rob them, is no reason why they should break +everything in the house. Sharp folks don't smash up furniture; they +carry pretty picklocks, which work well and make no noise. Idiots! one +would say--" + +He stopped with his mouth wide open. + +"Eh! Not so bungling, after all, perhaps." + +The witnesses of this scene remained motionless at the door, following, +with an interest mingled with surprise, the detective's movements. + +Kneeling down, he passed his flat palm over the thick carpet, among the +broken porcelain. + +"It's damp; very damp. The tea was not all drunk, it seems, when the +cups were broken." + +"Some tea might have remained in the teapot," suggested Plantat. + +"I know it," answered M. Lecoq, "just what I was going to say. So that +this dampness cannot tell us the exact moment when the crime was +committed." + +"But the clock does, and very exactly," interrupted the mayor. + +"The mayor," said M. Domini, "in his notes, well explains that the +movements of the clock stopped when it fell." + +"But see here," said M. Plantat, "it was the odd hour marked by that +clock that struck me. The hands point to twenty minutes past three; yet +we know that the countess was fully dressed, when she was struck. Was +she up taking tea at three in the morning? It's hardly probable." + +"I, too, was struck with that circumstance," returned M. Lecoq, "and +that's why I said, 'not so stupid!' Well, let's see." + +He lifted the clock with great care, and replaced it on the mantel, +being cautious to set it exactly upright. The hands continued to point +to twenty minutes past three. + +"Twenty past three!" muttered he, while slipping a little wedge under +the stand. "People don't take tea at that hour. Still less common is it +that people are murdered at daylight." + +He opened the clock-case with some difficulty, and pushed the longer +hand to the figure of half-past three. + +The clock struck eleven! + +"Good," cried M. Lecoq, triumphantly. "That is the truth!" and drawing +the lozenge-box from his pocket, he excitedly crushed a lozenge between +his teeth. + +The simplicity of this discovery surprised the spectators; the idea of +trying the clock in this way had occurred to no one. M. Courtois, +especially, was bewildered. + +"There's a fellow," whispered he to the doctor, "who knows what he's +about." + +"Ergo," resumed M. Lecoq (who knew Latin), "we have here, not brutes, as +I thought at first, but rascals who looked beyond the end of their +knife. They intended to put us off the scent, by deceiving us as to the +hour." + +"I don't see their object very clearly," said M. Courtois, timidly. + +"Yet it is easy to see it," answered M. Domini. "Was it not for their +interest to make it appear that the crime was committed after the last +train for Paris had left? Guespin, leaving his companions at the Lyons +station at nine, might have reached here at ten, murdered the count and +countess, seized the money which he knew to be in the count's +possession, and returned to Paris by the last train." + +"These conjectures are very shrewd," interposed M. Plantat; "but how is +it that Guespin did not rejoin his comrades in the Batignolles? For in +that way, to a certain degree, he might have provided a kind of alibi." + +Dr. Gendron had been sitting on the only unbroken chair in the chamber, +reflecting on Plantat's sudden embarrassment, when he had spoken of +Robelot the bone-setter. The remarks of the judge drew him from his +revery; he got up, and said: + +"There is another point; putting forward the time was perhaps useful to +Guespin, but it would greatly damage Bertaud, his accomplice." + +"But," answered M. Domini, "it might be that Bertaud was not consulted. +As to Guespin, he had no doubt good reasons for not returning to the +wedding. His restlessness, after such a deed, would possibly have +betrayed him." + +M. Lecoq had not thought fit to speak as yet. Like a doctor at a sick +bedside, he wanted to be sure of his diagnosis. He had returned to the +mantel, and again pushed forward the hands of the clock. It sounded, +successively, half-past eleven, then twelve, then half-past twelve, then +one. + +As he moved the hands, he kept muttering: + +"Apprentices--chance brigands! You are malicious, parbleu, but you don't +think of everything. You give a push to the hands, but don't remember to +put the striking in harmony with them. Then comes along a detective, an +old rat who knows things, and the dodge is discovered." + +M. Domini and Plantat held their tongues. M. Lecoq walked up to them. + +"Monsieur the Judge," said he, "is perhaps now convinced that the deed +was done at half-past ten." + +"Unless," interrupted M. Plantat, "the machinery of the clock has been +out of order." + +"That often happens," added M. Courtois. "The clock in my drawing-room +is in such a state that I never know the time of day." + +M. Lecoq reflected. + +"It is possible," said he, "that Monsieur Plantat is right. The +probability is in favor of my theory; but probability, in such an +affair, is not sufficient; we must have certainty. There happily remains +a mode of testing the matter--the bed; I'll wager it is rumpled up." +Then addressing the mayor, "I shall need a servant to lend me a hand." + +"I'll help you," said Plantat, "that will be a quicker way." + +They lifted the top of the bed and set it on the floor, at the same time +raising the curtains. + +"Hum!" cried M. Lecoq, "was I right?" + +"True," said M. Domini, surprised, "the bed is rumpled." + +"Yes; and yet no one has lain in it." + +"But--" objected M. Courtois. + +"I am sure of what I say," interrupted the detective. "The sheets, it is +true, have been thrown back, perhaps someone has rolled about in the +bed; the pillows have been tumbled, the quilts and curtains ruffled, but +this bed has not the appearance of having been slept in. It is, perhaps, +more difficult to rumple up a bed than to put it in order again. To make +it up, the coverings must be taken off, and the mattresses turned. To +disarrange it, one must actually lie down in it, and warm it with the +body. A bed is one of those terrible witnesses which never misguide, and +against which no counter testimony can be given. Nobody has gone to bed +in this--" + +"The countess," remarked Plantat, "was dressed; but the count might have +gone to bed first." + +"No," answered M. Lecoq, "I'll prove to the contrary. The proof is easy, +indeed, and a child of ten, having heard it, wouldn't think of being +deceived by this intentional disorder of the bedclothes." + +M. Lecoq's auditors drew up to him. He put the coverings back upon the +middle of the bed, and went on: + +"Both of the pillows are much rumpled, are they not? But look under the +bolster--it is all smooth, and you find none of those wrinkles which are +made by the weight of the head and the moving about of the arms. That's +not all; look at the bed from the middle to the foot. The sheets being +laid carefully, the upper and under lie close together everywhere. Slip +your hand underneath--there--you see there is a resistance to your hand +which would not occur if the legs had been stretched in that place. Now +Monsieur de Tremorel was tall enough to extend the full length of the +bed." + +This demonstration was so clear, its proof so palpable, that it could +not be gainsaid. + +"This is nothing," continued M. Lecoq. "Let us examine the second +mattress. When a person purposely disarranges a bed, he does not think +of the second mattress." + +He lifted up the upper mattress, and observed that the covering of the +under one was perfectly even. + +"H'm, the second mattress," muttered M. Lecoq, as if some memory crossed +his mind. + +"It appears to be proved," observed the judge, "that Monsieur de +Tremorel had not gone to bed." + +"Besides," added the doctor, "if he had been murdered in his bed, his +clothes would be lying here somewhere." + +"Without considering," suggested M. Lecoq, "that some blood must have +been found on the sheets. Decidedly, these criminals were not shrewd." + +"What seems to me surprising," M. Plantat observed to the judge, "is +that anybody would succeed in killing, except in his sleep, a young man +so vigorous as Count Hector." + +"And in a house full of weapons," added Dr. Gendron; "for the count's +cabinet is full of guns, swords and hunting knives; it's a perfect +arsenal." + +"Alas!" sighed M. Courtois, "we know of worse catastrophes. There is not +a week that the papers don't--" + +He stopped, chagrined, for nobody was listening to him. Plantat claimed +the general attention, and continued: + +"The confusion in the house seems to you surprising; well now, I'm +surprised that it is not worse than it is. I am, so to speak, an old +man; I haven't the energy of a young man of thirty-five; yet it seems to +me that if assassins should get into my house, when I was there, and up, +it would go hard with them. I don't know what I would do; probably I +should be killed; but surely I would give the alarm. I would defend +myself, and cry out, and open the windows, and set the house afire." + +"Let us add," insisted the doctor, "that it is not easy to surprise a +man who is awake. There is always an unexpected noise which puts one on +his guard. Perhaps it is a creaking door, or a cracking stair. However +cautious the murderer, he does not surprise his victim." + +"They may have used fire-arms;" struck in the worthy mayor, "that has +been done. You are quietly sitting in your chamber; it is summer, and +your windows are open; you are chatting with your wife, and sipping a +cup of tea; outside, the assassins are supplied with a short ladder; one +ascends to a level with the window, sights you at his ease, presses the +trigger, the bullet speeds--" + +"And," continued the doctor, "the whole neighborhood, aroused by it, +hastens to the spot." + +"Permit me, pardon, permit me," said M. Courtois, testily, "that would +be so in a populous town. Here, in the midst of a vast park, no. Think, +doctor, of the isolation of this house. The nearest neighbor is a long +way off, and between there are many large trees, intercepting the sound. +Let us test it by experience. I will fire a pistol in this room, and +I'll wager that you will not hear the echo in the road." + +"In the daytime, perhaps, but not in the night." + +"Well," said M. Domini, who had been reflecting while M. Courtois was +talking, "if against all hope, Guespin does not decide to speak +to-night, or to-morrow, the count's body will afford us a key to the +mystery." + +During this discussion, M. Lecoq had continued his investigations, +lifting the furniture, studying the fractures, examining the smallest +pieces, as if they might betray the truth. Now and then, he took out an +instrument-case, from which he produced a shank, which he introduced and +turned in the locks. He found several keys on the carpet, and on a rack, +a towel, which he carefully put one side, as if he deemed it important. +He came and went from the bedroom to the count's cabinet, without losing +a word that was said; noting in his memory, not so much the phrases +uttered, as the diverse accents and intonations with which they were +spoken. In an inquest such as that of the crime of Orcival, when several +officials find themselves face to face, they hold a certain reserve +toward each other. They know each other to have nearly equal experience, +to be shrewd, clear-headed, equally interested in discovering the truth, +not disposed to confide in appearances, difficult to surprise. Each one, +likely enough, gives a different interpretation to the facts revealed; +each may have a different theory of the deed; but a superficial observer +would not note these differences. Each, while dissimulating his real +thoughts, tries to penetrate those of his neighbor, and if they are +opposed to his own, to convert him to his opinion. The great importance +of a single word justifies this caution. Men who hold the liberty and +lives of others in their hands, a scratch of whose pen condemns to +death, are apt to feel heavily the burden of their responsibility. It is +an ineffable solace, to feel that this burden is shared by others. This +is, why no one dares take the initiative, or express himself openly; but +each awaits other opinions, to adopt or oppose them. They exchange fewer +affirmations than suggestions. They proceed by insinuation; then they +utter commonplaces, ridiculous suppositions, asides, provocative, as it +were, of other explanations. + +In this instance, the judge of instruction and Plantat were far from +being of the same opinion; they knew it before speaking a word. But M. +Domini, whose opinion rested on material and palpable facts, which +appeared to him indisputable, was not disposed to provoke contradiction. +Plantat, on the contrary, whose system seemed to rest on impressions, on +a series of logical deductions, would not clearly express himself, +without a positive and pressing invitation. His last speech, +impressively uttered, had not been replied to; he judged that he had +advanced far enough to sound the detective. + +"Well, Monsieur Lecoq," asked he, "have you found any new traces?" + +M. Lecoq was at that moment curiously examining a large portrait of the +Count Hector, which hung opposite the bed. Hearing M. Plantat's +question, he turned. + +"I have found nothing decisive," answered he, "and I have found nothing +to refute my conjectures. But--" + +He did not finish; perhaps he too, recoiled before his share of the +responsibility. + +"What?" insisted M. Domini, sternly. + +"I was going to say," resumed M. Lecoq, "that I am not yet satisfied. I +have my lantern and a candle in it; I only need a match--" + +"Please preserve your decorum," interrupted the judge severely. + +"Very well, then," continued M. Lecoq, in a tone too humble to be +serious, "I still hesitate. If the doctor, now, would kindly proceed to +examine the countess's body, he would do me a great service." + +"I was just going to ask the same favor, Doctor," said M. Domini. + +The doctor answering, "Willingly," directed his steps toward the door. + +M. Lecoq caught him by the arm. + +"If you please," said he, in a tone totally unlike that he had used up +to this time, "I would like to call your attention to the wounds on the +head, made by a blunt instrument, which I suppose to be a hammer. I have +studied these wounds, and though I am no doctor, they seem to me +suspicious." + +"And to me," M. Plantat quickly added. "It seemed to me, that in the +places struck, there was no emission of blood in the cutaneous vessels." + +"The nature of these wounds," continued M. Lecoq, "will be a valuable +indication, which will fix my opinion." And, as he felt keenly the +brusque manner of the judge, he added: + +"It is you, Doctor, who hold the match." + +M. Gendron was about to leave the room, when Baptiste, the mayor's +servant--the man who wouldn't be scolded--appeared. He bowed and said: + +"I have come for Monsieur the Mayor." + +"For me? why?" asked M. Courtois. "What's the matter? They don't give me +a minute's rest! Answer that I am busy." + +"It's on account of madame," resumed the placid Baptiste; "she isn't at +all well." The excellent mayor grew slightly pale. + +"My wife!" cried he, alarmed. "What do you mean? Explain yourself." + +"The postman arrived just now," returned Baptiste with a most tranquil +air, "and I carried the letters to madame, who was in the drawing-room. +Hardly had I turned on my heels when I heard a shriek, and the noise of +someone falling to the floor." Baptiste spoke slowly, taking artful +pains to prolong his master's anguish. + +"Speak! go on!" cried the mayor, exasperated. "Speak, won't you?" + +"I naturally opened the drawing-room door again. What did I see? madame, +at full length on the floor. I called for help; the chambermaid, cook, +and others came hastening up, and we carried madame to her bed. Justine +said that it was a letter from Mademoiselle Laurence which overcame my +mistress--" + +At each word Baptiste hesitated, reflected; his eyes, giving the lie to +his solemn face, betrayed the great satisfaction he felt in relating his +master's misfortunes. + +His master was full of consternation. As it is with all of us, when we +know not exactly what ill is about to befall us, he dared not ask any +questions. He stood still, crushed; lamenting, instead of hastening +home. M. Plantat profited by the pause to question the servant, with a +look which Baptiste dared not disobey. + +"What, a letter from Mademoiselle Laurence? Isn't she here, then?" + +"No, sir: she went away a week ago, to pass a month with one of her +aunts." + +"And how is madame?" + +"Better, sir; only she cries piteously." + +The unfortunate mayor had now somewhat recovered his presence of mind. +He seized Baptiste by the arm. + +"Come along," cried he, "come along!" + +They hastened off. + +"Poor man!" said the judge of instruction. "Perhaps his daughter is +dead." + +M. Plantat shook his head. + +"If it were only that!" muttered he. He added, turning to M. Domini: + +"Do you recall the allusions of Bertaud, monsieur?" + + + + +VII + + +The judge of instruction, the doctor, and M. Plantat exchanged a +significant look. What misfortune had befallen M. Courtois, this worthy, +and despite his faults, excellent person? Decidedly, this was an +ill-omened day! + +"If we are to speak of Bertaud's allusions," said M. Lecoq, "I have +heard two very curious stories, though I have been here but a few hours. +It seems that this Mademoiselle Laurence--" + +M. Plantat abruptly interrupted the detective. + +"Calumnies! odious calumnies! The lower classes, to annoy the rich, do +not hesitate to say all sorts of things against them. Don't you know it? +Is it not always so? The gentry, above all, those of a provincial town, +live in glass houses. The lynx eyes of envy watch them steadily night +and day, spy on them, surprise what they regard as their most secret +actions to arm themselves against them. The bourgeois goes on, proud and +content; his business prospers; he possesses the esteem and friendship +of his own class; all this while, he is vilified by the lower classes, +his name dragged in the dust, soiled by suppositions the most +mischievous. Envy, Monsieur, respects nothing, no one." + +"If Laurence has been slandered," observed Dr. Gendron, smiling, "she +has a good advocate to defend her." + +The old justice of the peace (the man of bronze, as M. Courtois called +him) blushed slightly, a little embarrassed. + +"There are causes," said he, quietly, "which defend themselves. +Mademoiselle Courtois is one of those young girls who has a right to all +respect. But there are evils which no laws can cure, and which revolt +me. Think of it, monsieurs, our reputations, the honor of our wives and +daughters, are at the mercy of the first petty rascal who has +imagination enough to invent a slander. It is not believed, perhaps; but +it is repeated, and spreads. What can be done? How can we know what is +secretly said against us; will we ever know it?" + +"Eh!" replied the doctor, "what matters it? There is only one voice, to +my mind, worth listening to--that of conscience. As to what is called +'public opinion,' as it is the aggregate opinion of thousands of fools +and rogues, I only despise it." + +This discussion might have been prolonged, if the judge of instruction +had not pulled out his watch, and made an impatient gesture. + +"While we are talking, time is flying," said he. "We must hasten to the +work that still remains." + +It was then agreed that while the doctor proceeded to his autopsy, the +judge should draw up his report of the case. M. Plantat was charged with +watching Lecoq's investigations. + +As soon as the detective found himself alone with M. Plantat: + +"Well," he said, drawing a long breath, as if relieved of a heavy +burden, "now we can get on." + +Plantat smiled; the detective munched a lozenge, and added: + +"It was very annoying to find the investigation already going on when I +reached here. Those who were here before me have had time to get up a +theory, and if I don't adopt it at once, there is the deuce to pay!" + +M. Domini's voice was heard in the entry, calling out to his clerk. + +"Now there's the judge of instruction," continued Lecoq, "who thinks +this a very simple affair; while I, Lecoq, the equal at least of Gevrol, +the favorite pupil of Papa Tabaret--I do not see it at all clearly yet." + +He stopped; and after apparently going over in his mind the result of +his discoveries, went on: "No; I'm off the track, and have almost lost +my way. I see something underneath all this--but what? what?" + +M. Plantat's face remained placid, but his eyes shone. + +"Perhaps you are right," said he, carelessly; "perhaps there is +something underneath." The detective looked at him; he didn't stir. His +face seemed the most undisturbed in the world. There was a long silence, +by which M. Lecoq profited to confide to the portrait of the defunct the +reflections which burdened his brain. + +"See here, my dear darling," said he, "this worthy person seems a shrewd +old customer, and I must watch his actions and gestures carefully. He +does not argue with the judge; he's got an idea that he doesn't dare to +tell, and we must find it out. At the very first he guessed me out, +despite these pretty blond locks. As long as he thought he could, by +misleading me, make me follow M. Domini's tack, he followed and aided me +showing me the way. Now that he sees me on the scent, he crosses his +arms and retires. He wants to leave me the honor of the discovery. Why? +He lives here--perhaps he is afraid of making enemies. No. He isn't a +man to fear much of anything. What then? He shrinks from his own +thoughts. He has found something so amazing, that he dares not explain +himself." + +A sudden reflection changed the course of M. Lecoq's confidences. + +"A thousand imps!" thought he. "Suppose I'm wrong! Suppose this old +fellow is not shrewd at all! Suppose he hasn't discovered anything, and +only obeys the inspirations of chance! I've seen stranger things. I've +known so many of these folks whose eyes seem so very mysterious, and +announce such wonders; after all, I found nothing, and was cheated. But +I intend to sound this old fellow well." + +And, assuming his most idiotic manner, he said aloud: + +"On reflection, Monsieur, little remains to be done. Two of the +principals are in custody, and when they make up their minds to +talk--they'll do it, sooner or later, if the judge is determined they +shall--we shall know all." + +A bucket of ice-water falling on M. Plantat's head could not have +surprised him more, or more disagreeably, than this speech. + +"What!" stammered he, with an air of frank amazement, "do you, a man of +experience, who--" + +Delighted with the success of his ruse, Lecoq could not keep his +countenance, and Plantat, who perceived that he had been caught in the +snare, laughed heartily. Not a word, however, was exchanged between +these two men, both subtle in the science of life, and equally cunning +in its mysteries. They quite understood each other. + +"My worthy old buck," said the detective to himself, "you've got +something in your sack; only it's so big, so monstrous, that you won't +exhibit it, not for a cannon-ball. You wish your hand forced, do you? +Ve-ry well!" + +"He's sly," thought M. Plantat. "He knows that I've got an idea; he's +trying to get at it--and I believe he will." + +M. Lecoq had restored his lozenge-box to his pocket, as he always did +when he went seriously to work. His amour-propre was enlisted; he played +a part--and he was a rare comedian. + +"Now," cried he, "let's to horse. According to the mayor's account, the +instrument with which all these things were broken has been found." + +"In the room in the second story," answered M. Plantat, "overlooking the +garden, we found a hatchet on the floor, near a piece of furniture which +had been assailed, but not broken open; I forbade anyone to touch it." + +"And you did well. Is it a heavy hatchet?" + +"It weighs about two pounds." + +"Good. Let's see it." + +They ascended to the room in question, and M. Lecoq, forgetting his part +of a haberdasher, and regardless of his clothes, went down flat on his +stomach, alternately scrutinizing the hatchet--which was a heavy, +terrible weapon--and the slippery and well-waxed oaken floor. + +"I suppose," observed M. Plantat, "that the assassins brought this +hatchet up here and assailed this cupboard, for the sole purpose of +putting us off our scent, and to complicate the mystery. This weapon, +you see, was by no means necessary for breaking open the cupboard, which +I could smash with my fist. They gave one blow--only one--and quietly +put the hatchet down." + +The detective got up and brushed himself. + +"I think you are mistaken," said he. "This hatchet wasn't put on the +floor gently; it was thrown with a violence betraying either great +terror or great anger. Look here; do you see these three marks, near +each other, on the floor? When the assassin threw the hatchet, it first +fell on the edge--hence this sharp cut; then it fell over on one side; +and the flat, or hammer end left this mark here, under my finger. +Therefore, it was thrown with such violence that it turned over itself +and that its edge a second time cut in the floor, where you see it now." + +"True," answered M. Plantat. The detective's conjectures doubtless +refuted his own theory, for he added, with a perplexed air: + +"I don't understand anything about it." + +M. Lecoq went on: + +"Were the windows open this morning as they are now?" + +"Yes." + +"Ah! The wretches heard some noise or other in the garden, and they went +and looked out. What did they see? I can't tell. But I do know that what +they saw terrified them, that they threw down the hatchet furiously, and +made off. Look at the position of these cuts--they are slanting of +course--and you will see that the hatchet was thrown by a man who was +standing, not by the cupboard, but close by the open window." + +Plantat in his turn knelt down, and looked long and carefully. The +detective was right. He got up confused, and after meditating a moment, +said: + +"This perplexes me a little; however--" + +He stopped, motionless, in a revery, with one of his hands on his +forehead. + +"All might yet be explained," he muttered, mentally searching for a +solution of the mystery, "and in that case the time indicated by the +clock would be true." + +M. Lecoq did not think of questioning his companion. He knew that he +would not answer, for pride's sake. + +"This matter of the hatchet puzzles me, too," said he. "I thought that +these assassins had worked leisurely; but that can't be so. I see they +were surprised and interrupted." + +Plantat was all ears. + +"True," pursued M. Lecoq, slowly, "we ought to divide these indications +into two classes. There are the traces left on purpose to mislead +us--the jumbled-up bed, for instance; then there are the real traces, +undesigned, as are these hatchet cuts. But here I hesitate. Is the trace +of the hatchet true or false, good or bad? I thought myself sure of the +character of these assassins: but now--" He paused; the wrinkles on his +face, the contraction of his mouth, betrayed his mental effort. + +"But now?" asked M. Plantat. + +M. Lecoq, at this question, seemed like a man just roused from sleep. + +"I beg your pardon," said he. "I forgot myself. I've a bad habit of +reflecting aloud. That's why I almost always insist on working alone. My +uncertainty, hesitation, the vacillation of my suspicions, lose me the +credit of being an astute detective--of being an agent for whom there's +no such thing as a mystery." + +Worthy M. Plantat gave the detective an indulgent smile. + +"I don't usually open my mouth," pursued M. Lecoq, "until my mind is +satisfied; then I speak in a peremptory tone, and say--this is thus, or +this is so. But to-day I am acting without too much restraint, in the +company of a man who knows that a problem such as this seems to me to +be, is not solved at the first attempt. So I permit my gropings to be +seen without shame. You cannot always reach the truth at a bound, but by +a series of diverse calculations, by deductions and inductions. Well, +just now my logic is at fault." + +"How so?" + +"Oh, it's very simple. I thought I understood the rascals, and knew them +by heart; and yet I have only recognized imaginary adversaries. Are they +fools, or are they mighty sly? That's what I ask myself. The tricks +played with the bed and clock had, I supposed, given me the measure and +extent of their intelligence and invention. Making deductions from the +known to the unknown, I arrived, by a series of very simple +consequences, at the point of foreseeing all that they could have +imagined, to throw us off the scent. My point of departure admitted, I +had only, in order to reach the truth, to take the contrary of that +which appearances indicated. I said to myself: + +"A hatchet has been found in the second story; therefore the assassins +carried it there, and designedly forgot it. + +"They left five glasses on the dining-room table; therefore they were +more or less than five, but they were not five. + +"There were the remains of a supper on the table; therefore they neither +drank nor ate. + +"The countess's body was on the river-bank; therefore it was placed +there deliberately. A piece of cloth was found in the victim's hand; +therefore it was put there by the murderers themselves. + +"Madame de Tremorel's body is disfigured by many dagger-strokes, and +horribly mutilated; therefore she was killed by a single blow--" + +"Bravo, yes, bravo," cried M. Plantat, visibly charmed. + +"Eh! no, not bravo yet," returned M. Lecoq. "For here my thread is +broken; I have reached a gap. If my deductions were sound, this hatchet +would have been very carefully placed on the floor." + +"Once more, bravo," added the other, "for this does not at all affect +our general theory. It is clear, nay certain, that the assassins +intended to act as you say. An unlooked-for event interrupted them." + +"Perhaps; perhaps that's true. But I see something else--" + +"What?" + +"Nothing--at least, for the moment. Before all, I must see the +dining-room and the garden." + +They descended at once, and Plantat pointed out the glasses and bottles, +which he had put one side. The detective took the glasses, one after +another, held them level with his eye, toward the light, and scrutinized +the moist places left on them. + +"No one has drank from these glasses," said he, firmly. + +"What, from neither one of them?" + +The detective fixed a penetrating look upon his companion, and in a +measured tone, said: + +"From neither one." + +M. Plantat only answered by a movement of the lips, as if to say, "You +are going too far." + +The other smiled, opened the door, and called: + +"Francois!" + +The valet hastened to obey the call. His face was suffused with tears; +he actually bewailed the loss of his master. + +"Hear what I've got to say, my lad," said M. Lecoq, with true +detective-like familiarity. "And be sure and answer me exactly, frankly, +and briefly." + +"I will, sir." + +"Was it customary here at the chateau, to bring up the wine before it +was wanted?" + +"No, sir; before each meal, I myself went down to the cellar for it." + +"Then no full bottles were ever kept in the dining-room?" + +"Never." + +"But some of the wine might sometimes remain in draught?" + +"No; the count permitted me to carry the dessert wine to the servants' +table." + +"And where were the empty bottles put?" + +"I put them in this corner cupboard, and when they amounted to a certain +number, I carried them down cellar." + +"When did you last do so?" + +"Oh"--Francois reflected--"at least five or six days ago." + +"Good. Now, what liqueurs did the count drink?" + +"The count scarcely ever drank liqueurs. If, by chance, he took a notion +to have a small glass of eau-de-vie, he got it from the liqueur closet, +there, over the stove." + +"There were no decanters of rum or cognac in any of the cupboards?" + +"No." + +"Thanks; you may retire." + +As Francois was going out, M. Lecoq called him back. + +"While we are about it, look in the bottom of the closet, and see if you +find the right number of empty bottles." + +The valet obeyed, and looked into the closet. + +"There isn't one there." + +"Just so," returned M. Lecoq. "This time, show us your heels for good." + +As soon as Francois had shut the door, M. Lecoq turned to Plantat and +asked: + +"What do you think now?" + +"You were perfectly right." + +The detective then smelt successively each glass and bottle. + +"Good again! Another proof in aid of my guess." + +"What more?" + +"It was not wine that was at the bottom of these glasses. Among all the +empty bottles put away in the bottom of that closet, there was one--here +it is--which contained vinegar; and it was from this bottle that they +turned what they thought to be wine into the glasses." + +Seizing a glass, he put it to M. Plantat's nose, adding: + +"See for yourself." + +There was no disputing it; the vinegar was good, its odor of the +strongest; the villains, in their haste, had left behind them an +incontestable proof of their intention to mislead the officers of +justice. While they were capable of shrewd inventions, they did not have +the art to perform them well. All their oversights could, however, be +accounted for by their sudden haste, caused by the occurrence of an +unlooked-for incident. "The floors of a house where a crime has just +been committed," said a famous detective, "burn the feet." M. Lecoq +seemed exasperated, like a true artist, before the gross, pretentious, +and ridiculous work of some green and bungling scholar. + +"These are a parcel of vulgar ruffians, truly! able ones, certainly; but +they don't know their trade yet, the wretches." + +M. Lecoq, indignant, ate three or four lozenges at a mouthful. + +"Come, now," said Plantat, in a paternally severe tone. "Don't let's get +angry. The people have failed in address, no doubt; but reflect that +they could not, in their calculations, take account of the craft of a +man like you." + +M. Lecoq, who had the vanity which all actors possess, was flattered by +the compliment, and but poorly dissimulated an expression of pleasure. + +"We must be indulgent; come now," pursued Plantat. "Besides," he paused +a moment to give more weight to what he was going to say, "besides, you +haven't seen everything yet." + +No one could tell when M. Lecoq was playing a comedy. He did not always +know, himself. This great artist, devoted to his art, practised the +feigning of all the emotions of the human soul, just as he accustomed +himself to wearing all sorts of costumes. He was very indignant against +the assassins, and gesticulated about in great excitement; but he never +ceased to watch Plantat slyly, and the last words of the latter made him +prick up his ears. + +"Let's see the rest, then," said he. + +As he followed his worthy comrade to the garden, he renewed his +confidences to the dear defunct. + +"Confound this old bundle of mystery! We can't take this obstinate +fellow by surprise, that's clear. He'll give us the word of the riddle +when we have guessed it; not before. He is as strong as we, my darling; +he only needs a little practice. But look you--if he has found something +which has escaped us, he must have previous information, that we don't +know of." + +Nothing had been disturbed in the garden. + +"See here, Monsieur Lecoq," said the old justice of the peace, as he +followed a winding pathway which led to the river. "It was here that one +of the count's slippers was found; below there, a little to the right of +these geraniums, his silk handkerchief was picked up." + +They reached the river-bank, and lifted, with great care, the planks +which had been placed there to preserve the foot-prints. + +"We suppose," said M. Plantat, "that the countess, in her flight, +succeeded in getting to this spot; and that here they caught up with her +and gave her a finishing blow." + +Was this really Plantat's opinion, or did he only report the morning's +theory? M. Lecoq could not tell. + +"According to my calculations," he said, "the countess could not have +fled, but was brought here already dead, or logic is not logic. However, +let us examine this spot carefully." + +He knelt down and studied the sand on the path, the stagnant water, and +the reeds and water-plants. Then going along a little distance, he threw +a stone, approaching again to see the effect produced on the mud. He +next returned to the house, and came back again under the willows, +crossing the lawn, where were still clearly visible traces of a heavy +burden having been dragged over it. Without the least respect for his +pantaloons, he crossed the lawn on all-fours, scrutinizing the smallest +blades of grass, pulling away the thick tufts to see the earth better, +and minutely observing the direction of the broken stems. This done, he +said: + +"My conclusions are confirmed. The countess was carried across here." + +"Are you sure of it?" asked Plantat. + +There was no mistaking the old man's hesitation this time; he was +clearly undecided, and leaned on the other's judgment for guidance. + +"There can be no error, possibly." + +The detective smiled, as he added: + +"Only, as two heads are better than one, I will ask you to listen to me, +and then, you will tell me what you think." + +M. Lecoq had, in searching about, picked up a little flexible stick, and +while he talked, he used it to point out this and that object, like the +lecturer at the panorama. + +"No," said he, "Madame de Tremorel did not fly from her murderers. Had +she been struck down here, she would have fallen violently; her weight, +therefore, would have made the water spirt to some distance, as well as +the mud; and we should certainly have found some splashes." + +"But don't you think that, since morning, the sun--" + +"The sun would have absorbed the water; but the stain of dry mud would +have remained. I have found nothing of the sort anywhere. You might +object, that the water and mud would have spirted right and left; but +just look at the tufts of these flags, lilies, and stems of cane--you +find a light dust on every one. Do you find the least trace of a drop of +water? No. There was then no splash, therefore no violent fall; +therefore the countess was not killed here; therefore her body was +brought here, and carefully deposited where you found it." + +M. Plantat did not seem to be quite convinced yet. + +"But there are the traces of a struggle in the sand," said he. + +His companion made a gesture of protest. + +"Monsieur deigns to have his joke; those marks would not deceive a +school-boy." + +"It appears to me, however--" + +"There can be no mistake, Monsieur Plantat. Certain it is that the sand +has been disturbed and thrown about. But all these trails that lay bare +the earth which was covered by the sand, were made by the same foot. +Perhaps you don't believe it. They were made, too, with the end of the +foot; that you may see for yourself." + +"Yes, I perceive it." + +"Very well, then; when there has been a struggle on ground like this, +there are always two distinct kinds of traces--those of the assailant +and those of the victim. The assailant, throwing himself forward, +necessarily supports himself on his toes, and imprints the fore part of +his feet on the earth. The victim, on the contrary, falling back, and +trying to avoid the assault, props himself on his heels, and therefore +buries the heels in the soil. If the adversaries are equally strong, the +number of imprints of the toes and the heels will be nearly equal, +according to the chances of the struggle. But what do we find here?" + +M. Plantat interrupted: + +"Enough; the most incredulous would now be convinced." After thinking a +moment, he added: + +"No, there is no longer any possible doubt of it." + +M. Lecoq thought that his argument deserved a reward, and treated +himself to two lozenges at a mouthful. + +"I haven't done yet," he resumed. "Granted, that the countess could not +have been murdered here; let's add that she was not carried hither, but +dragged along. There are only two ways of dragging a body; by the +shoulders, and in this case the feet, scraping along the earth, leave +two parallel trails; or by the legs--in which case the head, lying on +the earth, leaves a single furrow, and that a wide one." + +Plantat nodded assent. + +"When I examined the lawn," pursued M. Lecoq, "I found the parallel +trails of the feet, but yet the grass was crushed over a rather wide +space. How was that? Because it was the body, not of a man, but of a +woman, which was dragged across the lawn--of a woman full-dressed, with +heavy petticoats; that, in short, of the countess, and not of the +count." + +M. Lecoq paused, in expectation of a question, or a remark. + +But the old justice of the peace did not seem to be listening, and +appeared to be plunged in the deepest meditation. Night was falling; a +light fog hung like smoke over the Seine. + +"We must go in," said M. Plantat, abruptly, "and see how the doctor has +got on with his autopsy." + +They slowly approached the house. The judge of instruction awaited them +on the steps. He appeared to have a satisfied air. + +"I am going to leave you in charge," said he to M. Plantat, "for if I am +to see the procureur, I must go at once. When you sent for him this +morning, he was absent." + +M. Plantat bowed. + +"I shall be much obliged if you will watch this affair to the end. The +doctor will have finished in a few minutes, he says, and will report +to-morrow morning. I count on your co-operation to put seals wherever +they are necessary, and to select the guard over the chateau. I shall +send an architect to draw up an exact plan of the house and garden. +Well, sir," asked M. Domini, turning to the detective, "have you made +any fresh discoveries?" + +"I have found some important facts; but I cannot speak decisively till I +have seen everything by daylight. If you will permit me, I will postpone +making my report till to-morrow afternoon. I think I may say, however, +that complicated as this affair is--" + +M. Domini did not let him finish. + +"I see nothing complicated in the affair at all; everything strikes me +as very simple." + +"But," objected M. Lecoq, "I thought--" + +"I sincerely regret," continued the judge, "that you were so hastily +called, when there was really no serious reason for it. The evidences +against the arrested men are very conclusive." + +Plantat and Lecoq exchanged a long look, betraying their great surprise. + +"What!" exclaimed the former, "have, you discovered any new +indications?" + +"More than indications, I believe," responded M. Domini. "Old Bertaud, +whom I have again questioned, begins to be uneasy. He has quite lost his +arrogant manner. I succeeded in making him contradict himself several +times, and he finished by confessing that he saw the assassins." + +"The assassins!" exclaimed M. Plantat. "Did he say assassins?" + +"He saw at least one of them. He persists in declaring that he did not +recognize him. That's where we are. But prison walls have salutary +terrors. To-morrow after a sleepless night, the fellow will be more +explicit, if I mistake not." + +"But Guespin," anxiously asked the old man, "have you questioned him?" + +"Oh, as for him, everything is clear." + +"Has he confessed?" asked M. Lecoq, stupefied. + +The judge half turned toward the detective, as if he were displeased +that M. Lecoq should dare to question him. + +"Guespin has not confessed," he answered, "but his case is none the +better for that. Our searchers have returned. They haven't yet found the +count's body, and I think it has been carried down by the current. But +they found at the end of the park, the count's other slipper, among the +roses; and under the bridge, in the middle of the river, they discovered +a thick vest which still bears the marks of blood." + +"And that vest is Guespin's?" + +"Exactly so. It was recognized by all the domestics, and Guespin himself +did not hesitate to admit that it belonged to him. But that is not +all--" + +M. Domini stopped as if to take breath, but really to keep Plantat in +suspense. As they differed in their theories, he thought Plantat +betrayed a stupid opposition to him; and he was not sorry to have a +chance for a little triumph. + +"That is not all," he went on; "this vest had, in the right pocket, a +large rent, and a piece of it had been torn off. Do you know what became +of that piece of Guespin's vest?" + +"Ah," muttered M. Plantat, "it was that which we found in the countess's +hand." + +"You are right, Monsieur. And what think you of this proof, pray, of the +prisoner's guilt?" + +M. Plantat seemed amazed; his arms fell at his side. As for M. Lecoq, +who, in presence of the judge, had resumed his haberdasher manner, he +was so much surprised that he nearly strangled himself with a lozenge. + +"A thousand devils!" exclaimed he. "That's tough, that is!" He smiled +sillily, and added in a low tone, meant only for Plantat's ear. + +"Mighty tough! Though quite foreseen in our calculations. The countess +held a piece of cloth tightly in her hand; therefore it was put there, +intentionally, by the murderers." + +M. Domini did not hear this remark. He shook hands with M. Plantat and +made an appointment to meet him on the morrow, at the court-house. Then +he went away with his clerk. + +Guespin and old Bertaud, handcuffed, had a few minutes before being led +off to the prison of Corbeil, under the guard of the Orcival gendarmes. + + + + +VIII + + +Dr. Gendron had just finished his sad task in the billiard-room. He had +taken off his long coat, and pulled up his shirt-sleeves above his +elbows. His instruments lay on a table near him; he had covered the body +with a long white sheet. Night had come, and a large lamp, with a +crystal globe, lighted up the gloomy scene. The doctor, leaning over a +water-basin, was washing his hands, when the old justice of the peace +and the detective entered. + +"Ah, it's you, Plantat," said the doctor in a suppressed tone; "where is +Monsieur Domini?" + +"Gone." + +The doctor did not take the trouble to repress a vexed motion. + +"I must speak with him, though," said he, "it's absolutely +necessary--and the sooner the better; for perhaps I am wrong--I may be +mistaken--" + +M. Lecoq and M. Plantat approached him, having carefully closed the +door. The doctor was paler than the corpse which lay under the sheet. +His usually calm features betrayed great distress. This change could not +have been caused by the task in which he had been engaged. Of course it +was a painful one; but M. Gendron was one of those experienced +practitioners who have felt the pulse of every human misery, and whose +disgust had become torpid by the most hideous spectacles. He must have +discovered something extraordinary. + +"I am going to ask you what you asked me a while ago," said M. Plantat. +"Are you ill or suffering?" + +M. Gendron shook his head sorrowfully, and answered, slowly and +emphatically: + +"I will answer you, as you did me; 'tis nothing, I am already better." + +Then these two, equally profound, turned away their heads, as if fearing +to exchange their ideas; they doubted lest their looks should betray +them. + +M. Lecoq advanced and spoke. + +"I believe I know the cause of the doctor's emotion. He has just +discovered that Madame de Tremorel was killed by a single blow, and that +the assassins afterward set themselves to disfiguring the body, when it +was nearly cold." + +The doctor's eyes fastened on the detective, with a stupefied +expression. + +"How could you divine that?" he asked. + +"Oh, I didn't guess it alone; I ought to share the honor of the theory +which has enabled us to foresee this fact, with Monsieur Plantat." + +"Oh," cried the doctor, striking his forehead, "now, I recollect your +advice; in my worry, I must say, I had quite forgotten it. + +"Well," he added, "your foresight is confirmed. Perhaps not so much time +as you suppose elapsed between the first blow and the rest; but I am +convinced that the countess had ceased to live nearly three hours, when +the last blows were struck." + +M. Gendron went to the billiard-table, and slowly raised the sheet, +discovering the head and part of the bust. + +"Let us inform ourselves, Plantat," he said. + +The old justice of the peace took the lamp, and passed to the other side +of the table. His hand trembled so that the globe tingled. The +vacillating light cast gloomy shadows upon the walls. The countess's +face had been carefully bathed, the blood and mud effaced. The marks of +the blows were thus more visible, but they still found upon that livid +countenance, the traces of its beauty. M. Lecoq stood at the head of the +table, leaning over to see more clearly. + +"The countess," said Dr. Gendron, "received eighteen blows from a +dagger. Of these, but one is mortal; it is this one, the direction of +which is nearly vertical--a little below the shoulder, you see." He +pointed out the wound, sustaining the body in his left arm. The eyes had +preserved a frightful expression. It seemed as if the half-open mouth +were about to cry "Help! Help!" + +Plantat, the man with a heart of stone, turned away his head, and the +doctor, having mastered his first emotion, continued in a professionally +apathetic tone: + +"The blade must have been an inch wide, and eight inches long. All the +other wounds--those on the arms, breast, and shoulders, are +comparatively slight. They must have been inflicted at least two hours +after that which caused death." + +"Good," said M. Lecoq. + +"Observe that I am not positive," returned the doctor quickly. "I merely +state a probability. The phenomena on which I base my own conviction are +too fugitive, too capricious in their nature, to enable me to be +absolutely certain." + +This seemed to disturb M. Lecoq. + +"But, from the moment when--" + +"What I can affirm," interrupted Dr. Gendron, "what I would affirm under +oath, is, that all the wounds on the head, excepting one, were inflicted +after death. No doubt of that whatever--none whatever. Here, above the +eye, is the blow given while the countess was alive." + +"It seems to me, Doctor," observed M. Lecoq, "that we may conclude from +the proved fact that the countess, after death, was struck by a flat +implement, that she had also ceased to live when she was mutilated by +the knife." + +M. Gendron reflected a moment. + +"It is possible that you are right; as for me, I am persuaded of it. +Still the conclusions in my report will not be yours. The physician +consulted by the law, should only pronounce upon patent, demonstrated +facts. If he has a doubt, even the slightest, he should hold his tongue. +I will say more; if there is any uncertainty, my opinion is that the +accused, and not the prosecution, should have the benefit of it." + +This was certainly not the detective's opinion, but he was cautious not +to say so. He had followed Dr. Gendron with anxious attention, and the +contraction of his face showed the travail of his mind. + +"It seems to me now possible," said he, "to determine how and where the +countess was struck." + +The doctor had covered the body, and Plantat had replaced the lamp on +the little table. Both asked M. Lecoq to explain himself. + +"Very well," resumed the detective. "The direction of the wound proves +to me that the countess was in her chamber taking tea, seated, her body +inclined a little forward, when she was murdered. The assassin came up +behind her with his arm raised; he chose his position coolly, and struck +her with terrific force. The violence of the blow was such that the +victim fell forward, and in the fall, her forehead struck the end of the +table; she thus gave herself the only fatal blow which we have +discovered on the head." + +M. Gendron looked from one to the other of his companions, who exchanged +significant glances. Perhaps he suspected the game they were playing. + +"The crime must evidently have been committed as you say," said he. + +There was another embarrassing silence. M. Lecoq's obstinate muteness +annoyed Plantat, who finally asked him: + +"Have you seen all you want to see?" + +"All for to-day; I shall need daylight for what remains. I am confident, +indeed, that with the exception of one detail that worries me, I have +the key to the mystery." + +"We must be here, then, early to-morrow morning." + +"I will be here at any hour you will name." + +"Your search finished, we will go together to Monsieur Domini, at +Corbeil." + +"I am quite at your orders." + +There was another pause. + +M. Plantat perceived that M. Lecoq guessed his thoughts; and did not +understand the detective's capriciousness; a little while before, he had +been very loquacious, but now held his tongue. M. Lecoq, on the other +hand, was delighted to puzzle the old man a little, and formed the +intention to astonish him the next morning, by giving him a report which +should faithfully reflect all his ideas. Meanwhile he had taken out his +lozenge-box, and was intrusting a hundred secrets to the portrait. + +"Well," said the doctor, "there remains nothing more to be done except +to retire." + +"I was just going to ask permission to do so," said M. Lecoq. "I have +been fasting ever since morning." + +M. Plantat now took a bold step. + +"Shall you return to Paris to-night, Monsieur Lecoq?" asked he, +abruptly. + +"No; I came prepared to remain over-night; I've brought my night-gown, +which I left, before coming up here, at the little roadside inn below. I +shall sup and sleep there." + +"You will be poorly off at the Faithful Grenadier," said the old justice +of the peace. "You will do better to come and dine with me." + +"You are really too good, Monsieur--" + +"Besides, we have a good deal to say, and so you must remain the night +with me; we will get your night-clothes as we pass along." + +M. Lecoq bowed, flattered and grateful for the invitation. + +"And I shall carry you off, too, Doctor," continued M. Plantat, "whether +you will or not. Now, don't say no. If you insist on going to Corbeil +to-night, we will carry you over after supper." + +The operation of fixing the seals was speedily concluded; narrow strips +of parchment, held by large waxen seals, were affixed to all the doors, +as well as to the bureau in which the articles gathered for the purposes +of the investigation had been deposited. + + + + +IX + + +Despite the haste they made, it was nearly ten o'clock when M. Plantat +and his guests quitted the chateau of Valfeuillu. Instead of taking the +high road, they cut across a pathway which ran along beside Mme. de +Lanascol's park, and led diagonally to the wire bridge; this was the +shortest way to the inn where M. Lecoq had left his slight baggage. As +they went along, M. Plantat grew anxious about his good friend, M. +Courtois. + +"What misfortune can have happened to him?" said he to Dr. Gendron. + +"Thanks to the stupidity of that rascal of a servant, we learned nothing +at all. This letter from Mademoiselle Laurence has caused the trouble, +somehow." + +They had now reached the Faithful Grenadier. + +A big red-faced fellow was smoking a long pipe at the door, his back +against the house. He was talking with a railway employee. It was the +landlord. + +"Well, Monsieur Plantat," he cried, "what a horrible affair this is! +Come in, come in; there are several folks in the hall who saw the +assassins. What a villain old Bertaud is! And that Guespin; ah, I would +willingly trudge to Corbeil to see them put up the scaffold!" + +"A little charity, Master Lenfant; you forget that both these men were +among your best customers." + +Master Lenfant was confused by this reply; but his native impudence soon +regained the mastery. + +"Fine customers, parbleu!" he answered, "this thief of a Guespin has got +thirty francs of mine which I'll never see again." + +"Who knows?" said Plantat, ironically. "Besides, you are going to make +more than that to-night, there's so much company at the Orcival +festival." + +During this brief conversation, M. Lecoq entered the inn for his +night-gown. His office being no longer a secret, he was not now welcomed +as when he was taken for a simple retired haberdasher. Mme. Lenfant, a +lady who had no need of her husband's aid to show penniless sots the +door, scarcely deigned to answer him. When he asked how much he owed, +she responded, with a contemptuous gesture, "Nothing." When he returned +to the door, his night-gown in hand, M. Plantat said: + +"Let's hurry, for I want to get news of our poor mayor." + +The three hastened their steps, and the old justice of the peace, +oppressed with sad presentiments, and trying to combat them, continued: + +"If anything had happened at the mayor's, I should certainly have been +informed of it by this time. Perhaps Laurence has written that she is +ill, or a little indisposed. Madame Courtois, who is the best woman in +the world, gets excited about nothing; she probably wanted to send her +husband for Laurence at once. You'll see that it's some false alarm." + +No; some catastrophe had happened. A number of the village women were +standing before the mayor's gate. Baptiste, in the midst of the group, +was ranting and gesticulating. But at M. Plantat's approach, the women +fled like a troop of frightened gulls. The old man's unexpected +appearance annoyed the placid Baptiste not a little, for he was +interrupted, by the sudden departure of his audience, in the midst of a +superb oratorical flight. As he had a great fear of M. Plantat, however, +he dissimulated his chagrin with his habitual smile. + +"Ah, sir," cried he, when M. Plantat was three steps off, "ah, what an +affair! I was going for you--" + +"Does your master wish me?" + +"More than you can think. He ran so fast from Valfeuillu here, that I +could scarcely keep up with him. He's not usually fast, you know; but +you ought to have seen him this time, fat as he is!" + +M. Plantat stamped impatiently. + +"Well, we got here at last," resumed the man, "and monsieur rushed into +the drawing-room, where he found madame sobbing like a Magdalene. He was +so out of breath he could scarcely speak. His eyes stuck out of his +head, and he stuttered like this--'What's-the-matter? What's +the-matter?' Madame, who couldn't speak either, held out mademoiselle's +letter, which she had in her hand." + +The three auditors were on coals of fire; the rogue perceived it, and +spoke more and more slowly. + +"Then monsieur took the letter, went to the window, and at a glance read +it through. He cried out hoarsely, thus: 'Oh!' then he went to beating +the air with his hands, like a swimming dog; then he walked up and down +and fell, pouf! like a bag, his face on the floor. That was all." + +"Is he dead?" cried all three in the same breath. + +"Oh, no; you shall see," responded Baptiste, with a placid smile. + +M. Lecoq was a patient man, but not so patient as you might think. +Irritated by the manner of Baptiste's recital, he put down his bundle, +seized the man's arm with his right hand, while with the left he whisked +a light flexible cane, and said: + +"Look here, fellow, I want you to hurry up, you know." + +That was all he said; the servant was terribly afraid of this little +blond man, with a strange voice, and a fist harder than a vice. He went +on very rapidly this time, his eye fixed on M. Lecoq's rattan. + +"Monsieur had an attack of vertigo. All the house was in confusion; +everybody except I, lost their heads; it occurred to me to go for a +doctor, and I started off for one--for Doctor Gendron, whom I knew to be +at the chateau, or the doctor near by, or the apothecary--it mattered +not who. By good luck, at the street corner, I came upon Robelot, the +bone-setter--'Come, follow me,' said I. He did so; sent away those who +were tending monsieur, and bled him in both arms. Shortly after, he +breathed, then he opened his eyes, and then he spoke. Now he is quite +restored, and is lying on one of the drawing-room lounges, crying with +all his might. He told me he wanted to see Monsieur Plantat, and I--" + +"And--Mademoiselle Laurence?" asked M. Plantat, with a trembling voice. +Baptiste assumed a tragic pose. + +"Ah, gentlemen," said he, "don't ask me about her--'tis heartrending!" + +The doctor and M. Plantat heard no more, but hurried in; M. Lecoq +followed, having confided his night-gown to Baptiste, with, "Carry that +to M. Plantat's--quick!" + +Misfortune, when it enters a house, seems to leave its fatal imprint on +the very threshold. Perhaps it is not really so, but it is the feeling +which those who are summoned to it experience. As the physician and the +justice of the peace traversed the court-yard, this house, usually so +gay and hospitable, presented a mournful aspect. Lights were seen coming +and going in the upper story. Mlle. Lucile, the mayor's youngest +daughter, had had a nervous attack, and was being tended. A young girl, +who served as Laurence's maid, was seated in the vestibule, on the lower +stair, weeping bitterly. Several domestics were there also, frightened, +motionless, not knowing what to do in all this fright. The drawing-room +door was wide open; the room was dimly lighted by two candles; Mme. +Courtois lay rather than sat in a large arm-chair near the fireplace. +Her husband was reclining on a lounge near the windows at the rear of +the apartment. They had taken off his coat and had torn away his +shirt-sleeves and flannel vest, when he was to be bled. There were +strips of cotton wrapped about his naked arms. A small man, habited like +a well-to-do Parisian artisan, stood near the door, with an embarrassed +expression of countenance. It was Robelot, who had remained, lest any +new exigency for his services should arise. + +The entrance of his friend startled M. Courtois from the sad stupor into +which he had been plunged. He got up and staggered into the arms of the +worthy Plantat, saying, in a broken voice: + +"Ah, my friend, I am most miserable--most wretched!" + +The poor mayor was so changed as scarcely to be recognizable. He was no +longer the happy man of the world, with smiling face, firm look, the +pride of which betrayed plainly his self-importance and prosperity. In a +few hours he had grown twenty years older. He was broken, overwhelmed; +his thoughts wandered in a sea of bitterness. He could only repeat, +vacantly, again and again: + +"Wretched! most wretched!" + +M. Plantat was the right sort of a friend for such a time. He led M. +Courtois back to the sofa and sat down beside him, and taking his hand +in his own, forced him to calm his grief. He recalled to him that his +wife, the companion of his life, remained to him, to mourn the dear +departed with him. Had he not another daughter to cherish? But the poor +man was in no state to listen to all this. + +"Ah, my friend," said he shuddering, "you do not know all! If she had +died here, in the midst of us, comforted by our tender care, my despair +would be great; but nothing compared with that which now tortures me. If +you only knew--" + +M. Plantat rose, as if terrified by what he was about to hear. + +"But who can tell," pursued the wretched man, "where or how she died? +Oh, my Laurence, was there no one to hear your last agony and save you? +What has become of you, so young and happy?" + +He rose, shaking with anguish and cried: + +"Let us go, Plantat, and look for her at the Morgue." Then he fell back +again, muttering the lugubrious word, "the Morgue." + +The witnesses of this scene remained, mute, motionless, rigid, holding +their breath. The stifled sobs and groans of Mme. Courtois and the +little maid alone broke the silence. + +"You know that I am your friend--your best friend," said M. Plantat, +softly; "confide in me--tell me all." + +"Well," commenced M. Courtois, "know"--but his tears choked his +utterance, and he could not go on. Holding out a crumpled letter, wet +with tears, he stammered: + +"Here, read--it is her last letter." + +M. Plantat approached the table, and, not without difficulty, read: + +"DEARLY BELOVED PARENTS-- + +"Forgive, forgive, I beseech you, your unhappy daughter, the distress +she is about to cause you. Alas! I have been very guilty, but the +punishment is terrible! In a day of wandering, I forgot all--the example +and advice of my dear, sainted mother, my most sacred duty, and your +tenderness. I could not, no, I could not resist him who wept before me +in swearing for me an eternal love--and who has abandoned me. Now, all +is over; I am lost, lost. I cannot long conceal my dreadful sin. Oh, +dear parents, do not curse me. I am your daughter--I cannot bear to face +contempt, I will not survive my dishonor. + +"When this letter reaches you, I shall have ceased to live; I shall have +quitted my aunt's, and shall have gone far away, where no one will find +me. There I shall end my misery and despair. Adieu, then, oh, beloved +parents, adieu! I would that I could, for the last time, beg your +forgiveness on my knees. My dear mother, my good father, have pity on a +poor wanderer; pardon me, forgive me. Never let my sister Lucile know. +Once more, adieu--I have courage--honor commands! For you is the last +prayer and supreme thought of your poor LAURENCE." + + +Great tears rolled silently down the old man's cheeks as he deciphered +this sad letter. A cold, mute, terrible anger shrivelled the muscles of +his face. When he had finished, he said, in a hoarse voice: + +"Wretch!" + +M. Courtois heard this exclamation. + +"Ah, yes, wretch indeed," he cried, "this vile villain who has crept in +in the dark, and stolen my dearest treasure, my darling child! Alas, she +knew nothing of life. He whispered into her ear those fond words which +make the hearts of all young girls throb; she had faith in him; and now +he abandons her. Oh, if I knew who he was--if I knew--" + +He suddenly interrupted himself. A ray of intelligence had just +illumined the abyss of despair into which he had fallen. + +"No," said he, "a young girl is not thus abandoned, when she has a dowry +of a million, unless for some good reason. Love passes away; avarice +remains. The infamous wretch was not free--he was married. He could only +be the Count de Tremorel. It is he who has killed my child." + +The profound silence which succeeded proved to him that his conjecture +was shared by those around him. + +"I was blind, blind!" cried he. "For I received him at my house, and +called him my friend. Oh, have I not a right to a terrible vengeance?" + +But the crime at Valfeuillu occurred to him; and it was with a tone of +deep disappointment that he resumed: + +"And not to be able to revenge myself! I could riot, then, kill him with +my own hands, see him suffer for hours, hear him beg for mercy! He is +dead. He has fallen under the blows of assassins, less vile than +himself." + +The doctor and M. Plantat strove to comfort the unhappy man; but he went +on, excited more and more by the sound of his own voice. + +"Oh, Laurence, my beloved, why did you not confide in me? You feared my +anger, as if a father would ever cease to love his child. Lost, +degraded, fallen to the ranks of the vilest, I would still love thee. +Were you not my own? Alas! you knew not a father's heart. A father does +not pardon; he forgets. You might still have been happy, my lost love." + +He wept; a thousand memories of the time when Laurence was a child and +played about his knees recurred to his mind; it seemed as though it were +but yesterday. + +"Oh, my daughter, was it that you feared the world--the wicked, +hypocritical world? But we should have gone away. I should have left +Orcival, resigned my office. We should have settled down far away, in +the remotest corner of France, in Germany, in Italy. With money all is +possible. All? No! I have millions, and yet my daughter has killed +herself." + +He concealed his face in his hands; his sobs choked him. + +"And not to know what has become of her!" he continued. "Is it not +frightful? What death did she choose? You remember, Doctor, and you, +Plantat, her beautiful curls about her pure forehead, her great, +trembling eyes, her long curved lashes? Her smile--do you know, it was +the sun's ray of my life. I so loved her voice, and her mouth so fresh, +which gave me such warm, loving kisses. Dead! Lost! And not to know what +has become of her sweet form--perhaps abandoned in the mire of some +river. Do you recall the countess's body this morning? It will kill me! +Oh, my child--that I might see her one hour--one minute--that I might +give her cold lips one last kiss!" + +M. Lecoq strove in vain to prevent a warm tear which ran from his eyes, +from falling. M. Lecoq was a stoic on principle, and by profession. But +the desolate words of the poor father overcame him. Forgetting that his +emotion would be seen, he came out from the shadow where he had stood, +and spoke to M. Courtois: + +"I, Monsieur Lecoq, of the detectives, give you my honor that I will +find Mademoiselle Laurence's body." + +The poor mayor grasped desperately at this promise, as a drowning man to +a straw. + +"Oh, yes, we will find her, won't we? You will help me. They say that to +the police nothing is impossible--that they see and know everything. We +will see what has become of my child." + +He went toward M. Lecoq, and taking him by the hand: + +"Thank you," added he, "you are a good man. I received you ill a while +ago, and judged you with foolish pride: forgive me. We will succeed--you +will see, we will aid each other, we will put all the police on the +scent, we will search through France, money will do it--I have it--I +have millions--take them--" + +His energies were exhausted: he staggered and fell heavily on the +lounge. + +"He must not remain here long," muttered the doctor in Plantat's ear, +"he must get to bed. A brain fever, after such excitement, would not +surprise me." + +The old justice of the peace at once approached Mme. Courtois, who still +reclined in the arm-chair, apparently having seen or heard nothing of +what had passed, and oblivious in her grief. + +"Madame!" said he, "Madame!" + +She shuddered and rose, with a wandering air. + +"It is my fault," said she, "my miserable fault! A mother should read +her daughter's heart as in a book. I did not suspect Laurence's secret; +I am a most unhappy mother." + +The doctor also came to her. + +"Madame," said he, in an imperious tone, "your husband must be persuaded +to go to bed at once. His condition is very serious, and a little sleep +is absolutely necessary. I will have a potion prepared--" + +"Oh, my God!" cried the poor lady, wringing her hands, in the fear of a +new misfortune, as bitter as the first; which, however, restored her to +her presence of mind. She called the servants, who assisted the mayor to +regain his chamber. Mme. Courtois also retired, followed by the doctor. +Three persons only remained in the drawing-room--Plantat, Lecoq, and +Robelot, who still stood near the door. + +"Poor Laurence!" murmured Plantat. "Poor girl!" + +"It seems to me that her father is most to be pitied," remarked M. +Lecoq. "Such a blow, at his age, may be more than he can bear. Even +should he recover, his life is broken." + +"I had a sort of presentiment," said the other, "that this misfortune +would come. I had guessed Laurence's secret, but I guessed it too late." + +"And you did not try--" + +"What? In a delicate case like this, when the honor of a family depends +on a word, one must be circumspect. What could I do? Put Courtois on his +guard? Clearly not. He would have refused to believe me. He is one of +those men who will listen to nothing, and whom the brutal fact alone can +undeceive." + +"You might have dealt with the Count de Tremorel." + +"The count would have denied all. He would have asked what right I had +to interfere in his affairs." + +"But the girl?" + +M. Plantat sighed heavily. + +"Though I detest mixing up with what does not concern me, I did try one +day to talk with her. With infinite precaution and delicacy, and without +letting her see that I knew all, I tried to show her the abyss near +which she was drawing." + +"And what did she reply?" + +"Nothing. She laughed and joked, as women who have a secret which they +wish to conceal, do. Besides, I could not get a quarter of an hour alone +with her, and it was necessary to act, I knew--for I was her best +friend--before committing this imprudence of speaking to her. Not a day +passed that she did not come to my garden and cull my rarest +flowers--and I would not, look you, give one of my flowers to the Pope +himself. She had instituted me her florist in ordinary. For her sake I +collected my briars of the Cape--" + +He was talking on so wide of his subject that M. Lecoq could not repress +a roguish smile. The old man was about to proceed when he heard a noise +in the hall, and looking up he observed Robelot for the first time. His +face at once betrayed his great annoyance. + +"You were there, were you?" he said. + +The bone-setter smiled obsequiously. + +"Yes, Monsieur, quite at your service." + +"You have been listening, eh?" + +"Oh, as to that, I was waiting to see if Madame Courtois had any +commands for me." + +A sudden reflection occurred to M. Plantat; the expression of his eye +changed. He winked at M. Lecoq to call his attention, and addressing the +bone-setter in a milder tone, said: "Come here, Master Robelot." + +Lecoq had read the man at a glance. Robelot was a small, +insignificant-looking man, but really of herculean strength. His hair, +cut short behind, fell over his large, intelligent forehead. His eyes +shone with the fire of covetousness, and expressed, when he forgot to +guard them, a cynical boldness. A sly smile was always playing about his +thin lips, beneath which there was no beard. A little way off, with his +slight figure and his beardless face, he looked like a Paris gamin--one +of those little wretches who are the essence of all corruption, whose +imagination is more soiled than the gutters where they search for lost +pennies. + +Robelot advanced several steps, smiling and bowing. "Perhaps," said he, +"Monsieur has, by chance, need of me?" + +"None whatever, Master Robelot, I only wish to congratulate you on +happening in so apropos, to bleed Monsieur Courtois. Your lancet has, +doubtless, saved his life." + +"It's quite possible." + +"Monsieur Courtois is generous--he will amply recompense this great +service." + +"Oh, I shall ask him nothing. Thank God, I want nobody's help. If I am +paid my due, I am content." + +"I know that well enough; you are prosperous--you ought to be +satisfied." + +M. Plantat's tone was friendly, almost paternal. He was deeply +interested, evidently, in Robelot's prosperity. + +"Satisfied!" resumed the bone-setter. "Not so much as you might think. +Life is very dear for poor people." + +"But, haven't you just purchased an estate near d'Evry?" + +"Yes." + +"And a nice place, too, though a trifle damp. Happily you have stone to +fill it in with, on the land that you bought of the widow Frapesle." + +Robelot had never seen the old justice of the peace so talkative, so +familiar; he seemed a little surprised. + +"Three wretched pieces of land!" said he. + +"Not so bad as you talk about. Then you've also bought something in the +way of mines, at auction, haven't you?" + +"Just a bunch of nothing at all." + +"True, but it pays well. It isn't so bad, you see, to be a doctor +without a diploma." + +Robelot had been several times prosecuted for illegal practicing; so he +thought he ought to protest against this. + +"If I cure people," said he, "I'm not paid for it." + +"Then your trade in herbs isn't what has enriched you." + +The conversation was becoming a cross-examination. The bone-setter was +beginning to be restless. + +"Oh, I make something out of the herbs," he answered. + +"And as you are thrifty, you buy land." + +"I've also got some cattle and horses, which bring in something. I raise +horses, cows, and sheep." + +"Also without diploma?" + +Robelot waxed disdainful. + +"A piece of parchment does not make science. I don't fear the men of the +schools. I study animals in the fields and the stable, without bragging. +I haven't my equal for raising them, nor for knowing their diseases." + +M. Plantat's tone became more and more winning. + +"I know that you are a bright fellow, full of experience. Doctor +Gendron, with whom you served, was praising your cleverness a moment +ago." + +The bone-setter shuddered, not so imperceptibly as to escape Plantat, +who continued: "Yes, the good doctor said he never had so intelligent an +assistant. 'Robelot,' said he, 'has such an aptitude for chemistry, and +so much taste for it besides, that he understands as well as I many of +the most delicate operations.'" + +"Parbleu! I did my best, for I was well paid, and I was always fond of +learning." + +"And you were an apt scholar at Doctor Gendron's, Master Robelot; he +makes some very curious studies. His work and experience on poisons are +above all remarkable." + +Robelot's uneasiness became apparent; his look wavered. + +"Yes;" returned he, "I have seen some strange experiments." + +"Well, you see, you may think yourself lucky--for the doctor is going to +have a splendid chance to study this sort of thing, and he will +undoubtedly want you to assist him." + +But Robelot was too shrewd not to have already guessed that this +cross-examination had a purpose. What was M. Plantat after? he asked +himself, not without a vague terror. And, going over in his mind the +questions which had been asked, and the answers he had given, and to +what these questions led, he trembled. He thought to escape further +questioning by saying: + +"I am always at my old master's orders when he needs me." + +"He'll need you, be assured," said M. Plantat, who added, in a careless +tone, which his rapid glance at Robelot belied, "The interest attaching +to this case will be intense, and the task difficult. Monsieur +Sauvresy's body is to be disinterred." + +Robelot was certainly prepared for something strange, and he was armed +with all his audacity. But the name of Sauvresy fell upon his head like +the stroke of a club, and he stammered, in a choked voice: + +"Sauvresy!" + +M. Plantat had already turned his head, and continued in an indifferent +tone: + +"Yes, Sauvresy is to be exhumed. It is suspected that his death was not +wholly a natural one. You see, justice always has its suspicions." + +Robelot leaned against the wall so as not to fall. M. Plantat proceeded: + +"So Doctor Gendron has been applied to. He has, as you know, found +reactive drugs which betray the presence of an alkaloid, whatever it may +be, in the substances submitted to him for analysis. He has spoken to me +of a certain sensitive paper--" + +Appealing to all his energy, Robelot forced himself to stand up and +resume a calm countenance. + +"I know Doctor Gendron's process," said he, "but I don't see who could +be capable of the suspicions of which you speak." + +"I think there are more than suspicions," resumed M. Plantat. "Madame de +Tremorel, you know, has been murdered: her papers have, of course, been +examined; letters have been found, with very damaging revelations, +receipts, and so on." + +Robelot, apparently, was once more self-possessed; he forced himself to +answer: + +"Bast! let us hope that justice is in the wrong." + +Then, such was this man's self-control, despite a nervous trembling +which shook his whole body as the wind does the leaves, that he added, +constraining his thin lips to form a smile: + +"Madame Courtois does not come down; I am waited for at home, and will +drop in again to-morrow. Good-evening, gentlemen." + +He walked away, and soon the sand in the court was heard creaking with +his steps. As he went, he staggered like a drunken man. + +M. Lecoq went up to M. Plantat, and taking off his hat: + +"I surrender," said he, "and bow to you; you are great, like my master, +the great Tabaret." + +The detective's amour-propre was clearly aroused; his professional zeal +was inspired; he found himself before a great crime--one of those crimes +which triple the sale of the Gazette of the Courts. Doubtless many of +its details escaped him: he was ignorant of the starting-point; but he +saw the way clearing before him. He had surprised Plantat's theory, and +had followed the train of his thought step by step; thus he discovered +the complications of the crime which seemed so simple to M. Domini. His +subtle mind had connected together all the circumstances which had been +disclosed to him during the day, and now he sincerely admired the old +justice of the peace. As he gazed at his beloved portrait, he thought, +"Between the two of us--this old fox and I--we will unravel the whole +web." He would not, however, show himself to be inferior to his +companion. + +"Monsieur," said he, "while you were questioning this rogue, who will be +very useful to us, I did not lose any time. I've been looking about, +under the furniture and so on, and have found this slip of paper." + +"Let's see." + +"It is the envelope of the young lady's letter. Do you know where her +aunt, whom she was visiting, lives?" + +"At Fontainebleau, I believe." + +"Ah; well, this envelope is stamped 'Paris,' Saint-Lazare branch +post-office. I know this stamp proves nothing--" + +"It is, of course, an indication." + +"That is not all; I have read the letter itself--it was here on the +table." + +M. Plantat frowned involuntarily. + +"It was, perhaps, a liberty," resumed M. Lecoq, "but the end justifies +the means. Well, you have read this letter; but have you studied it, +examined the hand-writing, weighed the words, remarked the context of +the sentences?" + +"Ah," cried Plantat, "I was not mistaken then--you had the same idea +strike you that occurred to me!" + +And, in the energy of his excitement he seized the detective's hands and +pressed them as if he were an old friend. They were about to resume +talking when a step was heard on the staircase; and presently Dr. +Gendron appeared. + +"Courtois is better," said he, "he is in a doze, and will recover." + +"We have nothing more, then, to keep us here," returned M. Plantat. +"Let's be off. Monsieur Lecoq must be half dead with hunger." + +As they went away, M. Lecoq slipped Laurence's letter, with the +envelope, into his pocket. + + + + +X + + +M. Plantat's house was small and narrow; a philosopher's house. Three +large rooms on the ground-floor, four chambers in the first story, an +attic under the roof for the servants, composed all its apartments. +Everywhere the carelessness of a man who has withdrawn from the world +into himself, for years, ceasing to have the least interest in the +objects which surround him, was apparent. The furniture was shabby, +though it had been elegant; the mouldings had come off, the clocks had +ceased to keep time, the chairs showed the stuffing of their cushions, +the curtains, in places, were faded by the sun. The library alone +betrayed a daily care and attention. + +Long rows of books in calf and gilt were ranged on the carved oaken +shelves, a movable table near the fireplace contained M. Plantat's +favorite books, the discreet friends of his solitude. A spacious +conservatory, fitted with every accessory and convenience, was his only +luxury. In it flourished one hundred and thirty-seven varieties of +briars. + +Two servants, the widow Petit, cook and house-keeper, and Louis, +gardener, inhabited the house. If they did not make it a noisy one, it +was because Plantat, who talked little, detested also to hear others +talk. Silence was there a despotic law. It was very hard for Mme. Petit, +especially at first. She was very talkative, so talkative that when she +found no one to chat with, she went to confession; to confess was to +chat. She came near leaving the place twenty times; but the thought of +an assured pension restrained her. Gradually she became accustomed to +govern her tongue, and to this cloistral silence. But she revenged +herself outside for the privations of the household, and regained among +the neighbors the time lost at home. + +She was very much wrought up on the day of the murder. At eleven +o'clock, after going out for news, she had prepared monsieur's dinner; +but he did not appear. She waited one, two hours, five hours, keeping +her water boiling for the eggs; no monsieur. She wanted to send Louis to +look for him, but Louis being a poor talker and not curious, asked her +to go herself. The house was besieged by the female neighbors, who, +thinking that Mme. Petit ought to be well posted, came for news; no news +to give. + +Toward five o'clock, giving up all thought of breakfast, she began to +prepare for dinner. But when the village bell struck eight o'clock, +monsieur had not made his appearance. At nine, the good woman was beside +herself, and began to scold Louis, who had just come in from watering +the garden, and, seated at the kitchen table, was soberly eating a plate +of soup. + +The bell rung. + +"Ah, there's monsieur, at last." + +No, it was not monsieur, but a little boy, whom M. Plantat had sent from +Valfeuillu to apprise Mme. Petit that he would soon return, bringing +with him two guests who would dine and sleep at the house. The worthy +woman nearly fainted. It was the first time that M. Plantat had invited +anyone to dinner for five years. There was some mystery at the bottom of +it--so thought Mme. Petit, and her anger doubled with her curiosity. + +"To order a dinner at this hour," she grumbled. "Has he got +common-sense, then?" But reflecting that time pressed, she continued: + +"Go along, Louis; this is not the moment for two feet to stay in one +shoe. Hurry up, and wring three chickens' heads; see if there ain't some +ripe grapes in the conservatory; bring on some preserves; fetch some +wine from the cellar!" The dinner was well advanced when the bell rung +again. This time Baptiste appeared, in exceeding bad humor, bearing M. +Lecoq's night-gown. + +"See here," said he to the cook, "what the person, who is with your +master, gave me to bring here." + +"What person?" + +"How do I know? He's a spy sent down from Paris about this Valfeuillu +affair; not much good, probably--ill-bred--a brute--and a wretch." + +"But he's not alone with monsieur?" + +"No; Doctor Gendron is with them." + +Mme. Petit burned to get some news out of Baptiste; but Baptiste also +burned to get back and know what was taking place at his master's--so +off he went, without having left any news behind. + +An hour or more passed, and Mme. Petit had just angrily declared to +Louis that she was going to throw the dinner out the window, when her +master at last appeared, followed by his guests. They had not exchanged +a word after they left the mayor's. Aside from the fatigues of the +evening, they wished to reflect, and to resume their self-command. Mme. +Petit found it useless to question their faces--they told her nothing. +But she did not agree with Baptiste about M. Lecoq: she thought him +good-humored, and rather silly. Though the party was less silent at the +dinner-table, all avoided, as if by tacit consent, any allusion to the +events of the day. No one would ever have thought that they had just +been witnesses of, almost actors in, the Valfeuillu drama, they were so +calm, and talked so glibly of indifferent things. From time to time, +indeed, a question remained unanswered, or a reply came tardily; but +nothing of the sensations and thoughts, which were concealed beneath the +uttered commonplaces, appeared on the surface. + +Louis passed to and fro behind the diners, his white cloth on his arm, +carving and passing the wine. Mme. Petit brought in the dishes, and came +in thrice as often as was necessary, her ears wide open, leaving the +door ajar as often as she dared. Poor woman! she had prepared an +excellent dinner, and nobody paid any attention to it. + +M. Lecoq was fond of tit-bits; yet, when Louis placed on the table a +dish of superb grapes--quite out of season--his mouth did not so much as +expand into a smile. Dr. Gendron would have been puzzled to say what he +had eaten. The dinner was nearly over, when M. Plantat began to be +annoyed by the constraint which the presence of the servants put upon +the party. He called to the cook: + +"You will give us our coffee in the library, and may then retire, as +well as Louis." + +"But these gentlemen do not know their rooms," insisted Mme. Petit, +whose eavesdropping projects were checked by this order. "They will, +perhaps, need something." + +"I will show them their rooms," said M. Plantat, dryly. "And if they +need anything, I shall be here." + +They went into the library. M. Plantat brought out a box of cigars and +passed them round: + +"It will be healthful to smoke a little before retiring." + +M. Lecoq lit an aromatic weed, and remarked: + +"You two may go to bed if you like; I am condemned, I see, to a +sleepless night. But before I go to writing, I wish to ask you a few +things, Monsieur Plantat." + +M. Plantat bowed in token of assent. + +"We must resume our conversation," continued the detective, "and compare +our inferences. All our lights are not too much to throw a little +daylight upon this affair, which is one of the darkest I have ever met +with. The situation is dangerous, and time presses. On our acuteness +depends the fate of several innocent persons, upon whom rest very +serious charges. We have a theory: but Monsieur Domini also has one, and +his, let us confess, is based upon material facts, while ours rests upon +very disputable sensations and logic." + +"We have more than sensations," responded M. Plantat. + +"I agree with you," said the doctor, "but we must prove it." + +"And I will prove it, parbleu," cried M. Lecoq, eagerly. "The affair is +complicated and difficult--so much the better. Eh! If it were simple, I +would go back to Paris instanter, and to-morrow I would send you one of +my men. I leave easy riddles to infants. What I want is the inexplicable +enigmas, so as to unravel it; a struggle, to show my strength; +obstacles, to conquer them." + +M. Plantat and the doctor looked steadily at the speaker. He was as if +transfigured. It was the same yellow-haired and whiskered man, in a long +overcoat: yet the voice, the physiognomy, the very features, had +changed. His eyes shone with the fire of his enthusiasm, his voice was +metallic and vibrating, his imperious gesture affirmed the audacity and +energy of his resolution. + +"If you think, my friends," pursued he, "that they don't manufacture +detectives like me at so much a year, you are right. When I was twenty +years old, I took service with an astronomer, as his calculator, after a +long course of study. He gave me my breakfasts and seventy francs a +month; by means of which I dressed well, and covered I know not how many +square feet with figures daily." + +M. Lecoq puffed vigorously at his cigar a moment, casting a curious +glance at M. Plantat. Then he resumed: + +"Well, you may imagine that I wasn't the happiest of men. I forgot to +mention that I had two little vices: I loved the women, and I loved +play. All are not perfect. My salary seemed too small, and while I added +up my columns of figures, I was looking about for a way to make a rapid +fortune. There is, indeed, but one means; to appropriate somebody else's +money, shrewdly enough not to be found out. I thought about it day and +night. My mind was fertile in expedients, and I formed a hundred +projects, each more practicable than the others. I should frighten you +if I were to tell you half of what I imagined in those days. If many +thieves of my calibre existed, you'd have to blot the word 'property' +out of the dictionary. Precautions, as well as safes, would be useless. +Happily for men of property, criminals are idiots." + +"What is he coming to?" thought the doctor. + +"One day, I became afraid of my own thoughts. I had just been inventing +a little arrangement by which a man could rob any banker whatever of +200,000 francs without any more danger or difficulty than I raise this +cup. So I said to myself, 'Well, my boy, if this goes on a little +longer, a moment will come when, from the idea, you will naturally +proceed to the practice.' Having, however, been born an honest lad--a +mere chance--and being determined to use the talents which nature had +given me, eight days afterward I bid my astronomer good-morning, and +went to the prefecture. My fear of being a burglar drove me into the +police." + +"And you are satisfied with the exchange?" asked Dr. Gendron. + +"I' faith, Doctor, my first regret is yet to come. I am happy, because I +am free to exercise my peculiar faculties with usefulness to my race. +Existence has an enormous attraction for me, because I have still a +passion which overrides all others--curiosity." + +The detective smiled, and continued: + +"There are people who have a mania for the theatre. It is like my own +mania. Only, I can't understand how people can take pleasure in the +wretched display of fictions, which are to real life what a tallow dip +is to the sun. It seems to me monstrous that people can be interested in +sentiments which, though well represented, are fictitious. What! can you +laugh at the witticisms of a comedian, whom you know to be the +struggling father of a family? Can you pity the sad fate of the poor +actress who poisons herself, when you know that on going out you will +meet her on the boulevards? It's pitiable!" + +"Let's shut up the theatres," suggested Dr. Gendron. + +"I am more difficult to please than the public," returned M. Lecoq. "I +must have veritable comedies, or real dramas. My theatre is--society. My +actors laugh honestly, or weep with genuine tears. A crime is +committed--that is the prologue; I reach the scene, the first act +begins. I seize at a glance the minutest shades of the scenery. Then I +try to penetrate the motives, I group the characters, I link the +episodes to the central fact, I bind in a bundle all the circumstances. +The action soon reaches the crisis, the thread of my inductions conducts +me to the guilty person; I divine him, arrest him, deliver him up. Then +comes the great scene; the accused struggles, tries tricks, splits +straws; but the judge, armed with the arms I have forged for him, +overwhelms the wretch; he does not confess, but he is confounded. And +how many secondary personages, accomplices, friends, enemies, witnesses +are grouped about the principal criminal! Some are terrible, frightful, +gloomy--others grotesque. And you know not what the ludicrous in the +horrible is. My last scene is the court of assize. The prosecutor +speaks, but it is I who furnished his ideas; his phrases are +embroideries set around the canvas of my report. The president submits +his questions to the jury; what emotion! The fate of my drama is being +decided. The jury, perhaps, answers, 'Not guilty;' very well, my piece +was bad, I am hissed. If 'Guilty,' on the contrary, the piece was good, +I am applauded, and victorious. The next day I can go and see my hero, +and slapping him on the shoulder, say to him, 'You have lost, old +fellow, I am too much for you!'" + +Was M. Lecoq in earnest now, or was he playing a part? What was the +object of this autobiography? Without appearing to notice the surprise +of his companions, he lit a fresh cigar; then, whether designedly or +not, instead of replacing the lamp with which he lit it on the table, he +put it on one corner of the mantel. Thus M. Plantat's face was in full +view, while that of M. Lecoq remained in shadow. + +"I ought to confess," he continued, "without false modesty, that I have +rarely been hissed. Like every man I have my Achilles heel. I have +conquered the demon of play, but I have not triumphed over my passion +for woman." + +He sighed heavily, with the resigned gesture of a man who has chosen his +path. "It's this way. There is a woman, before whom I am but an idiot. +Yes, I the detective, the terror of thieves and murderers, who have +divulged the combinations of all the sharpers of all the nations, who +for ten years have swum amid vice and crime; who wash the dirty linen of +all the corruptions, who have measured the depths of human infamy; I who +know all, who have seen and heard all; I, Lecoq, am before her, more +simple and credulous than an infant. She deceives me--I see it--and she +proves that I have seen wrongly. She lies--I know it, I prove it to +her--and I believe her. It is because this is one of those passions," he +added, in a low, mournful tone, "that age, far from extinguishing, only +fans, and to which the consciousness of shame and powerlessness adds +fire. One loves, and the certainty that he cannot be loved in return is +one of those griefs which you must have felt to know its depth. In a +moment of reason, one sees and judges himself; he says, no, it's +impossible, she is almost a child, I almost an old man. He says +this--but always, in the heart, more potent than reason, than will, than +experience, a ray of hope remains, and he says to himself, 'who +knows--perhaps!' He awaits, what--a miracle? There are none, nowadays. +No matter, he hopes on." + +M. Lecoq stopped, as if his emotion prevented his going on. M. Plantat +had continued to smoke mechanically, puffing the smoke out at regular +intervals; but his face seemed troubled, his glance was unsteady, his +hands trembled. He got up, took the lamp from the mantel and replaced it +on the table, and sat down again. The significance of this scene at last +struck Dr. Gendron. + +In short, M. Lecoq, without departing widely from the truth, had just +attempted one of the most daring experiments of his repertoire, and he +judged it useless to go further. He knew now what he wished to know. +After a moment's silence, he shuddered as though awaking from a dream, +and pulling out his watch, said: + +"Par le Dieu! How I chat on, while time flies!" + +"And Guespin is in prison," remarked the doctor. + +"We will have him out," answered the detective, "if, indeed, he is +innocent; for this time I have mastered the mystery, my romance, if you +wish, and without any gap. There is, however, one fact of the utmost +importance, that I by myself cannot explain." + +"What?" asked M. Plantat. + +"Is it possible that Monsieur de Tremorel had a very great interest in +finding something--a deed, a letter, a paper of some sort--something of +a small size, secreted in his own house?" + +"Yes--that is possible," returned the justice of the peace. + +"But I must know for certain." + +M. Plantat reflected a moment. + +"Well then," he went on, "I am sure, perfectly sure, that if Madame de +Tremorel had died suddenly, the count would have ransacked the house to +find a certain paper, which he knew to be in his wife's possession, and +which I myself have had in my hands." + +"Then," said M. Lecoq, "there's the drama complete. On reaching +Valfeuillu, I, like you, was struck with the frightful disorder of the +rooms. Like you, I thought at first that this disorder was the result of +design. I was wrong; a more careful scrutiny has convinced me of it. The +assassin, it is true, threw everything into disorder, broke the +furniture, hacked the chairs in order to make us think that some furious +villains had been there. But amid these acts of premeditated violence I +have followed up the involuntary traces of an exact, minute, and I may +say patient search. Everything seemed turned topsy-turvy by chance; +articles were broken open with the hatchet, which might have been opened +with the hands; drawers had been forced which were not shut, and the +keys of which were in the locks. Was this folly? No. For really no +corner or crevice where a letter might be hid has been neglected. The +table and bureau-drawers had been thrown here and there, but the narrow +spaces between the drawers had been examined--I saw proofs of it, for I +found the imprints of fingers on the dust which lay in these spaces. The +books had been thrown pell-mell upon the floor, but every one of them +had been handled, and some of them with such violence that the bindings +were torn off. We found the mantel-shelves in their places, but every +one had been lifted up. The chairs were not hacked with a sword, for the +mere purpose of ripping the cloth--the seats were thus examined. My +conviction of the certainty that there had been a most desperate search, +at first roused my suspicions. I said to myself, 'The villains have been +looking for the money which was concealed; therefore they did not belong +to the household.'" + +"But," observed the doctor, "they might belong to the house, and yet not +know the money was hidden; for Guespin--" + +"Permit me," interrupted M. Lecoq, "I will explain myself. On the other +hand, I found indications that the assassin must have been closely +connected with Madame de Tremorel--her lover, or her husband. These were +the ideas that then struck me." + +"And now?" + +"Now," responded the detective, "with the certainty that something +besides booty might have been the object of the search, I am not far +from thinking that the guilty man is he whose body is being searched +for--the Count Hector de Tremorel." + +M. Plantat and Dr. Gendron had divined the name; but neither had as yet +dared to utter his suspicions. They awaited this name of Tremorel; and +yet, pronounced as it was in the middle of the night, in this great +sombre room, by this at least strange personage, it made them shudder +with an indescribable fright. + +"Observe," resumed M. Lecoq, "what I say; I believe it to be so. In my +eyes, the count's guilt is only as yet extremely probable. Let us see if +we three can reach the certainty of it. You see, gentlemen, the inquest +of a crime is nothing more nor less than the solution of a problem. +Given the crime, proved, patent, you commence by seeking out all the +circumstances, whether serious or superficial; the details and the +particulars. When these have been carefully gathered, you classify them, +and put them in their order and date. You thus know the victim, the +crime, and the circumstances; it remains to find the third term of the +problem, that is, x, the unknown quantity--the guilty party. The task is +a difficult one, but not so difficult as is imagined. The object is to +find a man whose guilt explains all the circumstances, all the details +found--all, understand me. Find such a man, and it is probable--and in +nine cases out of ten, the probability becomes a reality--that you hold +the perpetrator of the crime." + +So clear had been M. Lecoq's exposition, so logical his argument, that +his hearers could not repress an admiring exclamation: + +"Very good! Very good!" + +"Let us then examine together if the assumed guilt of the Count de +Tremorel explains all the circumstances of the crime at Valfeuillu." + +He was about to continue when Dr. Gendron, who sat near the window, rose +abruptly. + +"There is someone in the garden," said he. + +All approached the window. The weather was glorious, the night very +clear, and a large open space lay before the library window; they looked +out, but saw no one. + +"You are mistaken, Doctor," said Plantat, resuming his arm-chair. + +M. Lecoq continued: + +"Now let us suppose that, under the influence of certain events that we +will examine presently, Monsieur de Tremorel had made up his mind to get +rid of his wife. The crime once resolved upon, it was clear that the +count must have reflected, and sought out the means of committing it +with impunity; he must have weighed the circumstances, and estimated the +perils of his act. Let us admit, also, that the events which led him to +this extremity were such that he feared to be disturbed, and that he +also feared that a search would be made for certain things, even should +his wife die a natural death." + +"That is true," said M. Plantat, nodding his head. + +"Monsieur de Tremorel, then, determined to kill his wife, brutally, with +a knife, with the idea of so arranging everything, as to make it +believed that he too had been assassinated; and he also decided to +endeavor to thrust suspicion on an innocent person, or at least, an +accomplice infinitely less guilty than he. + +"He made up his mind in advance, in adopting this course, to disappear, +fly, conceal himself, change his personality; to suppress, in short, +Count Hector de Tremorel, and make for himself, under another name, a +new position and identity. These hypotheses, easily admitted, suffice to +explain the whole series of otherwise inconsistent circumstances. They +explain to us in the first place, how it was that on the very night of +the murder, there was a large fortune in ready money at Valfeuillu; and +this seems to me decisive. Why, when a man receives sums like this, +which he proposes to keep by him, he conceals the fact as carefully as +possible. Monsieur de Tremorel had not this common prudence. He shows +his bundles of bank-notes freely, handles them, parades them; the +servants see them, almost touch them. He wants everybody to know and +repeat that there is a large sum in the house, easy to take, carry off, +and conceal. And what time of all times, does he choose for this +display? Exactly the moment when he knows, and everyone in the +neighborhood knows, that he is going to pass the night at the chateau, +alone with Madame de Tremorel. + +"For he is aware that all his servants are invited, on the evening of +July 8th to the wedding of the former cook. So well aware of it is he, +that he defrays the wedding expenses, and himself names the day. You +will perhaps say that it was by chance that this money was sent to +Valfeuillu on the very night of the crime. At the worst that might be +admitted. But believe me, there was no chance about it, and I will prove +it. We will go to-morrow to the count's banker, and will inquire whether +the count did not ask him, by letter or verbally, to send him these +funds precisely on July 8th. Well, if he says yes, if he shows us such a +letter, or if he declares that the money was called for in person, you +will confess, no doubt, that I have more than a probability in favor of +my theory." + +Both his hearers bowed in token of assent. + +"So far, then, there is no objection." + +"Not the least," said M. Plantat. + +"My conjectures have also the advantage of shedding light on Guespin's +position. Honestly, his appearance is against him, and justifies his +arrest. Was he an accomplice or entirely innocent? We certainly cannot +yet decide. But it is a fact that he has fallen into an admirably +well-laid trap. The count, in selecting him for his victim, took all +care that every doubt possible should weigh upon him. I would wager that +Monsieur de Tremorel, who knew this fellow's history, thought that his +antecedents would add probability to the suspicions against him, and +would weigh with a terrible weight in the scales of justice. Perhaps, +too, he said to himself that Guespin would be sure to prove his +innocence in the end, and he only wished to gain time to elude the first +search. It is impossible that we can be deceived. We know that the +countess died of the first blow, as if thunderstruck. She did not +struggle; therefore she could not have torn a piece of cloth off the +assassin's vest. If you admit Guespin's guilt, you admit that he was +idiot enough to put a piece of his vest in his victim's hand; you admit +that he was such a fool as to go and throw this torn and bloody vest +into the Seine, from a bridge, in a place where he might know search +would be made--and all this, without taking the common precaution of +attaching it to a stone to carry it to the bottom. That would be absurd. + +"To me, then, this piece of cloth, this smeared vest, indicate at once +Guespin's innocence and the count's guilt." + +"But," objected Dr. Gendron, "if Guespin is innocent, why don't he talk? +Why don't he prove an alibi? How was it he had his purse full of money?" + +"Observe," resumed the detective, "that I don't say he is innocent; we +are still among the probabilities. Can't you suppose that the count, +perfidious enough to set a trap for his servant, was shrewd enough to +deprive him of every means of proving an alibi?" + +"But you yourself deny the count's shrewdness." + +"I beg your pardon; please hear me. The count's plan was excellent, and +shows a superior kind of perversity; the execution alone was defective. +This is because the plan was conceived and perfected in safety, while +when the crime had been committed, the murderer, distressed, frightened +at his danger, lost his coolness and only half executed his project. But +there are other suppositions. It might be asked whether, while Madame de +Tremorel was being murdered, Guespin might not have been committing some +other crime elsewhere." + +This conjecture seemed so improbable to the doctor that he could not +avoid objecting to it. "Oh!" muttered he. + +"Don't forget," replied Lecoq, "that the field of conjectures has no +bounds. Imagine whatever complication of events you may, I am ready to +maintain that such a complication has occurred or will present itself. +Lieuben, a German lunatic, bet that he would succeed in turning up a +pack of cards in the order stated in the written agreement. He turned +and turned ten hours per day for twenty years. He had repeated the +operation 4,246,028 times, when he succeeded." + +M. Lecoq was about to proceed with another illustration, when M. Plantat +interrupted him by a gesture. + +"I admit your hypotheses; I think they are more than probable--they are +true." + +M. Lecoq, as he spoke, paced up and down between the window and the +book-shelves, stopping at emphatic words, like a general who dictates to +his aides the plan of the morrow's battle. To his auditors, he seemed a +new man, with serious features, an eye bright with intelligence, his +sentences clear and concise--the Lecoq, in short, which the magistrates +who have employed his talents, would recognize. + +"Now," he resumed, "hear me. It is ten o'clock at night. No noise +without, the road deserted, the village lights extinguished, the chateau +servants away at Paris. The count and countess are alone at Valfeuillu. + +"They have gone to their bedroom. + +"The countess has seated herself at the table where tea has been served. +The count, as he talks with her, paces up and down the chamber. + +"Madame de Tremorel has no ill presentiment; her husband, the past few +days, has been more amiable, more attentive than ever. She mistrusts +nothing, and so the count can approach her from behind, without her +thinking of turning her head. + +"When she hears him coming up softly, she imagines that he is going to +surprise her with a kiss. He, meanwhile, armed with a long dagger, +stands beside his wife. He knows where to strike that the wound may be +mortal. He chooses the place at a glance; takes aim; strikes a terrible +blow--so terrible that the handle of the dagger imprints itself on both +sides of the wound. The countess falls without a sound, bruising her +forehead on the edge of the table, which is overturned. Is not the +position of the terrible wound below the left shoulder thus explained--a +wound almost vertical, its direction being from right to left?" + +The doctor made a motion of assent. + +"And who, besides a woman's lover or her husband is admitted to her +chamber, or can approach her when she is seated without her turning +round?" + +"That's clear," muttered M. Plantat. + +"The countess is now dead," pursued M. Lecoq. "The assassin's first +emotion is one of triumph. He is at last rid of her who was his wife, +whom he hated enough to murder her, and to change his happy, splendid, +envied existence for a frightful life, henceforth without country, +friend, or refuge, proscribed by all nations, tracked by all the police, +punishable by the laws of all the world! His second thought is of this +letter or paper, this object of small size which he knows to be in his +wife's keeping, which he has demanded a hundred times, which she would +not give up to him, and which he must have." + +"Add," interrupted M. Plantat, "that this paper was one of the motives +of the crime." + +"The count thinks he knows where it is. He imagines that he can put his +hand on it at once. He is mistaken. He looks into all the drawers and +bureaus used by his wife--and finds nothing. He searches every corner, +he lifts up the shelves, overturns everything in the chamber--nothing. +An idea strikes him. Is this letter under the mantel-shelf? By a turn of +the arm he lifts it--down the clock tumbles and stops. It is not yet +half-past ten." + +"Yes," murmured the doctor, "the clock betrays that." + +"The count finds nothing under the mantel-shelf except the dust, which +has retained traces of his fingers. Then he begins to be anxious. Where +can this paper be, for which he has risked his life? He grows angry. How +search the locked drawers? The keys are on the carpet--I found them +among the debris of the tea service--but he does not see them. He must +have some implement with which to break open everything. He goes +downstairs for a hatchet. The drunkenness of blood and vengeance is +dissipated on the staircase; his terrors begin. All the dark corners are +peopled, now, with those spectres which form the cortege of assassins; +he is frightened, and hurries on. He soon goes up again, armed with a +large hatchet--that found on the second story--and makes the pieces of +wood fly about him. He goes about like a maniac, rips up the furniture +at hazard; but he pursues a desperate search, the traces of which I have +followed, among the debris. Nothing, always nothing! Everything in the +room is topsy-turvy; he goes into his cabinet and continues the +destruction; the hatchet rises and falls without rest. He breaks his own +bureau, since he may find something concealed there of which he is +ignorant. This bureau belonged to the first husband--to Sauvresy. He +takes out all the books in the library, one by one, shakes them +furiously, and throws them about the floor. The infernal paper is +undiscoverable. His distress is now too great for him to pursue the +search with the least method. His wandering reason no longer guides him. +He staggers, without calculation, from one thing to another, fumbling a +dozen times in the same drawer, while he completely forgets others just +by him. Then he thinks that this paper may have been hid in the stuffing +of a chair. He seizes a sword, and to be certain, he slashes up the +drawing-room chairs and sofas and those in the other rooms." + +M. Lecoq's voice, accent, gestures, gave a vivid character to his +recital. The hearer might imagine that he saw the crime committed, and +was present at the terrible scenes which he described. His companions +held their breath, unwilling by a movement to distract his attention. + +"At this moment," pursued he, "the count's rage and terror were at their +height. He had said to himself, when he planned the murder, that he +would kill his wife, get possession of the letter, execute his plan +quickly, and fly. And now all his projects were baffled! How much time +was being lost, when each minute diminished the chances of escape! Then +the probability of a thousand dangers which had not occurred to him, +entered his mind. What if some friend should suddenly arrive, expecting +his hospitality, as had occurred twenty times? What if a passer-by on +the road should notice a light flying from room to room? Might not one +of the servants return? When he is in the drawing-room, he thinks he +hears someone ring at the gate; such is his terror, that he lets his +candle fall--for I have found the marks of it on the carpet. He hears +strange noises, such as never before assailed his ears; he thinks he +hears walking in the next room; the floor creaks. Is his wife really +dead; will she not suddenly rise up, run to the window, and scream for +help? Beset by these terrors, he returns to the bedroom, seizes his +dagger, and again strikes the poor countess. But his hand is so unsteady +that the wounds are light. You have observed, doctor, that all these +wounds take the same direction. They form right angles with the body, +proving that the victim was lying down when they were inflicted. Then, +in the excess of his frenzy, he strikes the body with his feet, and his +heels form the contusions discovered by the autopsy." + +M. Lecoq paused to take breath. He not only narrated the drama, he acted +it, adding gesture to word; and each of his phrases made a scene, +explained a fact, and dissipated a doubt. Like all true artists who wrap +themselves up in the character they represent, the detective really felt +something of the sensations which he interpreted, and his expressive +face was terrible in its contortions. + +"That," he resumed, "is the first act of the drama. An irresistible +prostration succeeds the count's furious passion. The various +circumstances which I am describing to you are to be noticed in nearly +all great crimes. The assassin is always seized, after the murder, with +a horrible and singular hatred against his victim, and he often +mutilates the body. Then comes the period of a prostration so great, of +torpor so irresistible, that murderers have been known literally to go +to sleep in the blood, that they have been surprised sleeping, and that +it was with great difficulty that they were awakened. The count, when he +has frightfully disfigured the poor lady, falls into an arm-chair; +indeed, the cloth of one of the chairs has retained some wrinkles, which +shows that someone had sat in it. What are then the count's thoughts? He +reflects on the long hours which have elapsed, upon the few hours which +remain to him. He reflects that he has found nothing; that he will +hardly have time, before day, to execute his plans for turning suspicion +from him, and assure his safety, by creating an impression that he, too, +has been murdered. And he must fly at once--fly, without that accursed +paper. He summons up his energies, rises, and do you know what he does? +He seizes a pair of scissors and cuts off his long, carefully cultivated +beard." + +"Ah!" interrupted M. Plantat, "that's why you examined the portrait so +closely." + +M. Lecoq was too intent on following the thread of his deductions to +note the interruption. + +"This is one of those vulgar details," pursued he, "whose very +insignificance makes them terrible, when they are attended by certain +circumstances. Now imagine the Count de Tremorel, pale, covered with his +wife's blood, shaving himself before his glass; rubbing the soap over +his face, in that room all topsy-turvy, while three steps off lies the +still warm and palpitating body! It was an act of terrible courage, +believe me, to look at himself in the glass after a murder--one of which +few criminals are capable. The count's hands, however, trembled so +violently that he could scarcely hold his razor, and his face must have +been cut several times." + +"What!" said Dr. Gendron, "do you imagine that the count spared the time +to shave?" + +"I am positively sure of it, pos-i-tive-ly. A towel on which I have +found one of those marks which a razor leaves when it is wiped--and one +only--has put me on the track of this fact. I looked about, and found a +box of razors, one of which had recently been used, for it was still +moist; and I have carefully preserved both the towel and the box. And if +these proofs are not enough, I will send to Paris for two of my men, who +will find, somewhere in the house or the garden, both the count's beard +and the cloth with which he wiped his razor. As to the fact which +surprises you, Doctor, it seems to me very natural; more, it is the +necessary result of the plan he adopted. Monsieur de Tremorel has always +worn his full beard: he cuts it off, and his appearance is so entirely +altered, that if he met anyone in his flight, he would not be +recognized." + +The doctor was apparently convinced, for he cried: + +"It's clear--it's evident," + +"Once thus disguised, the count hastens to carry out the rest of his +plan, to arrange everything to throw the law off the scent, and to make +it appear that he, as well as his wife, has been murdered. He hunts up +Guespin's vest, tears it out at the pocket, and puts a piece of it in +the countess's hand. Then taking the body in his arms, crosswise, he +goes downstairs. The wounds bleed frightfully--hence the numerous stains +discovered all along his path. Reaching the foot of the staircase he is +obliged to put the countess down, in order to open the garden-door. This +explains the large stain in the vestibule. The count, having opened the +door, returns for the body and carries it in his arms as far as the edge +of the lawn; there he stops carrying it, and drags it by the shoulders, +walking backward, trying thus to create the impression that his own body +has been dragged across there and thrown into the Seine. But the wretch +forgot two things which betray him to us. He did not reflect that the +countess's skirts, in being dragged along the grass, pressing it down +and breaking it for a considerable space, spoiled his trick. Nor did he +think that her elegant and well-curved feet, encased in small +high-heeled boots, would mould themselves in the damp earth of the lawn, +and thus leave against him a proof clearer than the day." + +M. Plantat rose abruptly. + +"Ah," said he, "you said nothing of this before." + +"Nor of several other things, either. But I was before ignorant of some +facts which I now know; and as I had reason to suppose that you were +better informed than I, I was not sorry to avenge myself for a caution +which seemed to me mysterious." + +"Well, you are avenged," remarked the doctor, smiling. + +"On the other side of the lawn," continued M. Lecoq, "the count again +took up the countess's body. But forgetting the effect of water when it +spirts, or--who knows?--disliking to soil himself, instead of throwing +her violently in the river, he put her down softly, with great +precaution. That's not all. He wished it to appear that there had been a +terrible struggle. What does he do? Stirs up the sand with the end of +his foot. And he thinks that will deceive the police!" + +"Yes, yes," muttered Plantat, "exactly so--I saw it." + +"Having got rid of the body, the count returns to the house. Time +presses, but he is still anxious to find the paper. He hastens to take +the last measures to assure his safety. He smears his slippers and +handkerchief with blood. He throws his handkerchief and one of his +slippers on the sward, and the other slipper into the river. His haste +explains the incomplete execution of his manoeuvres. He hurries--and +commits blunder after blunder. He does not reflect that his valet will +explain about the empty bottles which he puts on the table. He thinks he +is turning wine into the five glasses--it is vinegar, which will prove +that no one has drunk out of them. He ascends, puts forward the hands of +the clock, but forgets to put the hands and the striking bell in +harmony. He rumples up the bed, but he does it awkwardly--and it is +impossible to reconcile these three facts, the bed crumpled, the clock +showing twenty minutes past three, and the countess dressed as if it +were mid-day. He adds as much as he can to the disorder of the room. He +smears a sheet with blood; also the bed-curtains and furniture. Then he +marks the door with the imprint of a bloody hand, too distinct and +precise not to be done designedly. Is there so far a circumstance or +detail of the crime, which does not explain the count's guilt?" + +"There's the hatchet," answered M. Plantat, "found on the second story, +the position of which seemed so strange to you." + +"I am coming to that. There is one point in this mysterious affair, +which, thanks to you, is now clear. We know that Madame de Tremorel, +known to her husband, possessed and concealed a paper or a letter, which +he wanted, and which she obstinately refused to give up in spite of all +his entreaties. You have told us that the anxiety--perhaps the +necessity--to have this paper, was a powerful motive of the crime. We +will not be rash then in supposing that the importance of this paper was +immense--entirely beyond an ordinary affair. It must have been, somehow, +very damaging to one or the other. To whom? To both, or only the count? +Here I am reduced to conjectures. It is certain that it was a +menace--capable of being executed at any moment--suspended over the head +of him or them concerned by it. Madame de Tremorel surely regarded this +paper either as a security, or as a terrible arm which put her husband +at her mercy. It was surely to deliver himself from this perpetual +menace that the count killed his wife." + +The logic was so clear, the last words brought the evidence out so +lucidly and forcibly, that his hearers were struck with admiration. They +both cried: + +"Very good!" + +"Now," resumed M. Lecoq, "from the various elements which have served to +form our conviction, we must conclude that the contents of this letter, +if it can be found, will clear away our last doubts, will explain the +crime, and will render the assassin's precautions wholly useless. The +count, therefore, must do everything in the world, must attempt the +impossible, not to leave this danger behind him. His preparations for +flight ended, Hector, in spite of his deadly peril, of the speeding +time, of the coming day, instead of flying recommences with more +desperation than ever his useless search. Again he goes through all the +furniture, the books, the papers--in vain. Then he determines to search +the second story, and armed with his hatchet, goes up to it. He has +already attacked a bureau, when he hears a cry in the garden. He runs to +the window--what does he see? Philippe and old Bertaud are standing on +the river-bank under the willows, near the corpse. Can you imagine his +immense terror? Now, there's not a second to lose--he has already +delayed too long. The danger is near, terrible. Daylight has come, the +crime is discovered, they are coming, he sees himself lost beyond hope. +He must fly, fly at once, at the peril of being seen, met, arrested. He +throws the hatchet down violently--it cuts the floor. He rushes down, +slips the bank-notes in his pocket, seizes Guespin's torn and smeared +vest, which he will throw into the river from the bridge, and saves +himself by the garden. Forgetting all caution, confused, beside himself, +covered with blood, he runs, clears the ditch, and it is he whom old +Bertaud sees making for the forest of Mauprevoir, where he intends to +arrange the disorder of his clothes. For the moment he is safe. But he +leaves behind him this letter, which is, believe me, a formidable +witness, which will enlighten justice and will betray his guilt and the +perfidy of his projects. For he has not found it, but we will find it; +it is necessary for us to have it to defeat Monsieur Domini, and to +change our doubts into certainty." + + + + +XI + + +A long silence followed the detective's discourse. Perhaps his hearers +were casting about for objections. At last Dr. Gendron spoke: + +"I don't see Guespin's part in all this." + +"Nor I, very clearly," answered M. Lecoq. "And here I ought to confess +to you not only the strength, but the weakness also, of the theory I +have adopted. By this method, which consists of reconstructing the crime +before discovering the criminal, I can be neither right nor wrong by +halves. Either all my inferences are correct, or not one of them is. +It's all, or nothing. If I am right, Guespin has not been mixed up with +this crime, at least directly; for there isn't a single circumstance +which suggests outside aid. If, on the other hand, I am wrong--" + +M. Lecoq paused. He seemed to have heard some unexpected noise in the +garden. + +"But I am not wrong. I have still another charge against the count, of +which I haven't spoken, but which seems to be conclusive." + +"Oh," cried the doctor, "what now?" + +"Two certainties are better than one, and I always doubt. When I was +left alone a moment with Francois, the valet, I asked him if he knew +exactly the number of the count's shoes; he said yes, and took me to a +closet where the shoes are kept. A pair of boots, with green Russia +leather tops, which Francois was sure the count had put on the previous +morning, was missing. I looked for them carefully everywhere, but could +not find them. Again, the blue cravat with white stripes which the count +wore on the 8th, had also disappeared." + +"There," cried M. Plantat, "that is indisputable proof that your +supposition about the slippers and handkerchief was right." + +"I think that the facts are sufficiently established to enable us to go +forward. Let's now consider the events which must have decided--" + +M. Lecoq again stopped, and seemed to be listening. All of a sudden, +without a word he jumped on the window-sill and from thence into the +garden, with the bound of a cat which pounces on a mouse. The noise of a +fall, a stifled cry, an oath, were heard, and then a stamping as if a +struggle were going on. The doctor and M. Plantat hastened to the +window. Day was breaking, the trees shivered in the fresh wind of the +early morning,--objects were vaguely visible without distinct forms +across the white mist which hangs, on summer nights, over the valley of +the Seine. In the middle of the lawn, at rapid intervals, they heard the +blunt noise of a clinched fist striking a living body, and saw two men, +or rather two phantoms, furiously swinging their arms. Presently the two +shapes formed but one, then they separated, again to unite; one of the +two fell, rose at once, and fell again. + +"Don't disturb yourselves," cried M. Lecoq's voice. "I've got the +rogue." + +The shadow of the detective, which was upright, bent over, and the +conflict was recommenced. The shadow stretched on the ground defended +itself with the dangerous strength of despair; his body formed a large +brown spot in the middle of the lawn, and his legs, kicking furiously, +convulsively stretched and contracted. Then there was a moment when the +lookers-on could not make out which was the detective. They rose again +and struggled; suddenly a cry of pain escaped, with a ferocious oath. + +"Ah, wretch!" + +And almost immediately a loud shout rent the air, and the detective's +mocking tones were heard: + +"There he is! I've persuaded him to pay his respects to us--light me up +a little." + +The doctor and his host hastened to the lamp; their zeal caused a delay, +and at the moment that the doctor raised the lamp, the door was rudely +pushed open. + +"I beg to present to you," said M. Lecoq, "Master Robelot, bone-setter +of Orcival, herborist by prudence, and poisoner by vocation." + +The stupefaction of the others was such that neither could speak. + +It was really the bone-setter, working his jaws nervously. His adversary +had thrown him down by the famous knee-stroke which is the last resort +of the worst prowlers about the Parisian barriers. But it was not so +much Robelot's presence which surprised M. Plantat and his friend. Their +stupor was caused by the detective's appearance; who, with his wrist of +steel--as rigid as handcuffs--held the doctor's ex-assistant, and pushed +him forward. The voice was certainly Lecoq's; there was his costume, his +big-knotted cravat, his yellow-haired watch-chain--still it was no +longer Lecoq. He was blond, with highly cultivated whiskers, when he +jumped out the window; he returned, brown, with a smooth face. The man +who had jumped out was a middle-aged person, with an expressive face +which was in turn idiotic and intelligent; the man who returned by the +door was a fine young fellow of thirty-five, with a beaming eye and a +sensitive lip; a splendid head of curly black hair, brought out vividly +the pallor of his complexion, and the firm outline of his head and face. +A wound appeared on his neck, just below the chin. + +"Monsieur Lecoq!" cried M. Plantat, recovering his voice. + +"Himself," answered the detective, "and this time the true Lecoq." +Turning to Robelot, he slapped him on the shoulder and added: + +"Go on, you." + +Robelot fell upon a sofa, but the detective continued to hold him fast. + +"Yes," he continued, "this rascal has robbed me of my blond locks. +Thanks to him and in spite of myself, you see me as I am, with the head +the Creator gave me, and which is really my own." He gave a careless +gesture, half angry, half good-humored. "I am the true Lecoq; and to +tell the truth, only three persons besides yourselves really know +him--two trusted friends, and one who is infinitely less so--she of whom +I spoke a while ago." + +The eyes of the other two met as if to question each other, and M. Lecoq +continued: + +"What can a fellow do? All is not rose color in my trade. We run such +dangers, in protecting society, as should entitle us to the esteem, if +not the affection of our fellow-men: Why, I am condemned to death, at +this moment, by seven of the most dangerous criminals in France. I have +caught them, you see, and they have sworn--they are men of their word, +too--that I should only die by their hands. Where are these wretches? +Four at Cayenne, one at Brest; I've had news of them. But the other two? +I've lost their track. Who knows whether one of them hasn't followed me +here, and whether to-morrow, at the turning of some obscure road, I +shall not get six inches of cold steel in my stomach?" + +He smiled sadly. + +"And no reward," pursued he, "for the perils which we brave. If I should +fall to-morrow, they would take up my body, carry it to my house, and +that would be the end." The detective's tone had become bitter, the +irritation of his voice betrayed his rancor. "My precautions happily are +taken. While I am performing my duties, I suspect everything, and when I +am on my guard I fear no one. But there are days when one is tired of +being on his guard, and would like to be able to turn a street corner +without looking for a dagger. On such days I again become myself; I take +off my false beard, throw down my mask, and my real self emerges from +the hundred disguises which I assume in turn. I have been a detective +fifteen years, and no one at the prefecture knows either my true face or +the color of my hair." + +Master Robelot, ill at ease on his lounge, attempted to move. + +"Ah, look out!" cried M. Lecoq, suddenly changing his tone. "Now get up +here, and tell us what you were about in the garden?" + +"But you are wounded!" exclaimed Plantat, observing stains of blood on +M. Lecoq's shirt. + +"Oh, that's nothing--only a scratch that this fellow gave me with a big +cutlass he had." + +M. Plantat insisted on examining the wound, and was not satisfied until +the doctor declared it to be a very slight one. + +"Come, Master Robelot," said the old man, "what were you doing here?" + +The bone-setter did not reply. + +"Take care," insisted M. Plantat, "your silence will confirm us in the +idea that you came with the worst designs." + +But it was in vain that M. Plantat wasted his persuasive eloquence. +Robelot shut himself up in a ferocious and dogged silence. M. Gendron, +hoping, not without reason, that he might have some influence over his +former assistant, spoke: + +"Answer us; what did you come for?" + +Robelot made an effort; it was painful, with his broken jaw, to speak. + +"I came to rob; I confess it." + +"To rob--what?" + +"I don't know." + +"But you didn't scale a wall and risk the jail without a definite +object?" + +"Well, then, I wanted--" + +He stopped. + +"What? Go on." + +"To get some rare flowers in the conservatory." + +"With your cutlass, hey?" said M. Lecoq. Robelot gave him a terrible +look; the detective continued: + +"You needn't look at me that way--you don't scare me. And don't talk +like a fool, either. If you think we are duller than you, you are +mistaken--I warn you of it." + +"I wanted the flower-pots," stammered the man. + +"Oh, come now," cried M. Lecoq, shrugging his shoulders, "don't repeat +such nonsense. You, a man that buys large estates for cash, steal +flower-pots! Tell that to somebody else. You've been turned over +to-night, my boy, like an old glove. You've let out in spite of yourself +a secret that tormented you furiously, and you came here to get it back +again. You thought that perhaps Monsieur Plantat had not told it to +anybody, and you wanted to prevent him from speaking again forever." + +Robelot made a sign of protesting. + +"Shut up now," said M. Lecoq. "And your cutlass?" + +While this conversation was going on, M. Plantat reflected. + +"Perhaps," he murmured, "I've spoken too soon." + +"Why so?" asked M. Lecoq. "I wanted a palpable proof for Monsieur +Domini; we'll give him this rascal, and if he isn't satisfied, he's +difficult to please." + +"But what shall we do with him?" + +"Shut him up somewhere in the house; if necessary, I'll tie him up." + +"Here's a dark closet." + +"Is it secure?" + +"There are thick walls on three sides of it, and the fourth is closed +with a double door; no openings, no windows, nothing." + +"Just the place." + +M. Plantat opened the closet, a black-looking hole, damp, narrow, and +full of old books and papers. + +"There," said M. Lecoq to his prisoner, "in here you'll be like a little +king," and he pushed him into the closet. Robelot did not resist, but he +asked for some water and a light. They gave him a bottle of water and a +glass. + +"As for a light," said M. Lecoq, "you may dispense with it. You'll be +playing us some dirty trick." + +M. Plantat, having shut the closet-door, took the detective's hand. + +"Monsieur," said he, earnestly, "you have probably just saved my life at +the peril of your own; I will not thank you. The day will come, I trust, +when I may--" + +The detective interrupted him with a gesture. + +"You know how I constantly expose myself," said he, "once more or less +does not matter much. Besides, it does not always serve a man to save +his life." He was pensive a moment, then added: "You will thank me after +awhile, when I have gained other titles to your gratitude." + +M. Gendron also cordially shook the detective's hand, saying: + +"Permit me to express my admiration of you. I had no idea what the +resources of such a man as you were. You got here this morning without +information, without details, and by the mere scrutiny of the scene of +the crime, by the sole force of reasoning, have found the criminal: +more, you have proved to us that the criminal could be no other than he +whom you have named." + +M. Lecoq bowed modestly. These praises evidently pleased him greatly. + +"Still," he answered, "I am not yet quite satisfied. The guilt of the +Count de Tremorel is of course abundantly clear to me. But what motives +urged him? How was he led to this terrible impulse to kill his wife, and +make it appear that he, too, had been murdered?" + +"Might we not conclude," remarked the doctor, "that, disgusted with +Madame de Tremorel, he has got rid of her to rejoin another woman, +adored by him to madness?" + +M. Lecoq shook his head. + +"People don't kill their wives for the sole reason that they are tired +of them and love others. They quit their wives, live with the new +loves--that's all. That happens every day, and neither the law nor +public opinion condemns such people with great severity." + +"But it was the wife who had the fortune." + +"That wasn't the case here. I have been posting myself up. M. de +Tremorel had a hundred thousand crowns, the remains of a colossal +fortune saved by his friend Sauvresy; and his wife by the marriage +contract made over a half million to him. A man can live in ease +anywhere on eight hundred thousand francs. Besides, the count was master +of all the funds of the estate. He could sell, buy, realize, borrow, +deposit, and draw funds at will." + +The doctor had nothing to reply. M. Lecoq went on, speaking with a +certain hesitation, while his eyes interrogated M. Plantat. + +"We must find the reasons of this murder, and the motives of the +assassin's terrible resolution--in the past. Some crime so indissolubly +linked the count and countess, that only the death of one of them could +free the other. I suspected this crime the first thing this morning, and +have seen it all the way through; and the man that we have just shut up +in there--Robelot--who wanted to murder Monsieur Plantat, was either the +agent or the accomplice of this crime." + +The doctor had not been present at the various episodes which, during +the day at Valfeuillu and in the evening at the mayor's, had established +a tacit understanding between Plantat and Lecoq. He needed all the +shrewdness he possessed to fill up the gaps and understand the hidden +meanings of the conversation to which he had been listening for two +hours. M. Lecoq's last words shed a ray of light upon it all, and the +doctor cried, "Sauvresy!" + +"Yes--Sauvresy," answered M. Lecoq. "And the paper which the murderer +hunted for so eagerly, for which he neglected his safety and risked his +life, must contain the certain proof of the crime." + +M. Plantat, despite the most significant looks and the direct +provocation to make an explanation, was silent. He seemed a hundred +leagues off in his thoughts, and his eyes, wandering in space, seemed to +follow forgotten episodes in the mists of the past. M. Lecoq, after a +brief pause, decided to strike a bold blow. + +"What a past that must have been," exclaimed he, "which could drive a +young, rich, happy man like Hector de Tremorel to plan in cool blood +such a crime, to resign himself to disappear after it, to cease to +exist, as it were to lose all at once his personality, his position, his +honor and his name! What a past must be that which drives a young girl +of twenty to suicide!" + +M. Plantat started up, pale, more moved than he had yet appeared. + +"Ah," cried he, in an altered voice, "you don't believe what you say! +Laurence never knew about it, never!" + +The doctor, who was narrowly watching the detective, thought he saw a +faint smile light up his mobile features. The old justice of the peace +went on, now calmly and with dignity, in a somewhat haughty tone: + +"You didn't need tricks or subterfuge, Monsieur Lecoq, to induce me to +tell what I know. I have evinced enough esteem and confidence in you to +deprive you of the right to arm yourself against me with the sad secret +which you have surprised." + +M. Lecoq, despite his cool-headedness, was disconcerted. + +"Yes," pursued M. Plantat, "your astonishing genius for penetrating +dramas like this has led you to the truth. But you do not know all, and +even now I would hold my tongue, had not the reasons which compelled me +to be silent ceased to exist." + +He opened a secret drawer in an old oaken desk near the fireplace and +took out a large paper package, which he laid on the table. + +"For four years," he resumed, "I have followed, day by day--I might say, +hour by hour--the various phases of the dreadful drama which ended in +blood last night at Valfeuillu. At first, the curiosity of an old +retired attorney prompted me. Later, I hoped to save the life and honor +of one very dear to me. Why did I say nothing of my discoveries? That, +my friends, is the secret of my conscience--it does not reproach me. +Besides, I shut my eyes to the evidence even up to yesterday; I needed +the brutal testimony of this deed!" + +Day had come. The frightened blackbirds flew whistling by. The pavement +resounded with the wooden shoes of the workmen going fieldward. No noise +troubled the sad stillness of the library, unless it were the rustling +of the leaves which M. Plantat was turning over, or now and then a groan +from Robelot. + +"Before commencing," said the old man, "I ought to consider your +weariness; we have been up twenty-four hours--" + +But the others protested that they did not need repose. The fever of +curiosity had chased away their exhaustion. They were at last to know +the key of the mystery. + +"Very well," said their host, "listen to me." + + + + +XII + + +The Count Hector de Tremorel, at twenty-six, was the model and ideal of +the polished man of the world, proper to our age; a man useless alike to +himself and to others, harmful even, seeming to have been placed on +earth expressly to play at the expense of all. Young, noble, elegant, +rich by millions, endowed with vigorous health, this last descendant of +a great family squandered most foolishly and ignobly both his youth and +his patrimony. He acquired by excesses of all kinds a wide and +unenviable celebrity. People talked of his stables, his carriages, his +servants, his furniture, his dogs, his favorite loves. His cast-off +horses still took prizes, and a jade distinguished by his notice was +eagerly sought by the young bloods of the town. Do not think, however, +that he was naturally vicious; he had a warm heart, and even generous +emotions at twenty. Six years of unhealthy pleasures had spoiled him to +the marrow. Foolishly vain, he was ready to do anything to maintain his +notoriety. He had the bold and determined egotism of one who has never +had to think of anyone but himself, and has never suffered. Intoxicated +by the flatteries of the so-called friends who drew his money from him, +he admired himself, mistaking his brutal cynicism for wit, and his lofty +disdain of all morality and his idiotic scepticism, for character. He +was also feeble; he had caprices, but never a will; feeble as a child, a +woman, a girl. His biography was to be found in the petty journals of +the day, which retailed his sayings--or what he might have said; his +least actions and gestures were reported. + +One night when he was supping at the Cafe de Paris, he threw all the +plates out the window. It cost him twenty thousand francs. Bravo! One +morning gossiping Paris learned with stupefaction that he had eloped to +Italy with the wife of X---, the banker, a lady nineteen years married. +He fought a duel, and killed his man. The week after, he was wounded in +another. He was a hero! On one occasion he went to Baden, where he broke +the bank. Another time, after playing sixty hours, he managed to lose +one hundred and twenty thousand francs--won by a Russian prince. + +He was one of those men whom success intoxicates, who long for applause, +but who care not for what they are applauded. Count Hector was more than +ravished by the noise he made in the world. It seemed to him the acme of +honor and glory to have his name or initials constantly in the columns +of the Parisian World. He did not betray this, however, but said, with +charming modesty, after each new adventure: + +"When will they stop talking about me?" + +On great occasions, he borrowed from Louis XIV the epigram: + +"After me the deluge." + +The deluge came in his lifetime. + +One April morning, his valet, a villainous fellow, drilled and dressed +up by the count--woke him at nine o'clock with this speech: + +"Monsieur, a bailiff is downstairs in the ante-chamber, and has come to +seize your furniture." + +Hector turned on his pillow, yawned, stretched, and replied: + +"Well, tell him to begin operations with the stables and carriage-house; +and then come up and dress me." + +He did not seem disturbed, and the servant retired amazed at his +master's coolness. The count had at least sense enough to know the state +of his finances; and he had foreseen, nay, expected the bailiff's visit. +Three years before, when he had been laid up for six weeks in +consequence of a fall from his horse, he had measured the depth of the +gulf toward which he was hastening. Then, he might yet have saved +himself. But he must have changed his whole course of life, reformed his +household, learned that twenty-one franc pieces made a napoleon. Fie, +never! After mature reflection he had said to himself that he would go +on to the end. When the last hour came, he would fly to the other end of +France, erase his name from his linen, and blow his brains out in some +forest. + +This hour had now come. + +By contracting debts, signing bills, renewing obligations, paying +interests and compound interests, giving commissions by always +borrowing, and never paying, Hector had consumed the princely +heritage--nearly four millions in lands--which he had received at his +father's death. The winter just past had cost him fifty thousand crowns. +He had tried eight days before to borrow a hundred thousand francs, and +had failed. He had been refused, not because his property was not as +much as he owed, but because it was known that property sold by a +bankrupt does not bring its value. + +Thus it was that when the valet came in and said, "The bailiff is here," +he seemed like a spectre commanding suicide. + +Hector took the announcement coolly and said, as he got up: + +"Well, here's an end of it." + +He was very calm, though a little confused. A little confusion is +excusable when a man passes from wealth to beggary. He thought he would +make his last toilet with especial care. Parbleu! The French nobility +goes into battle in court costume! He was ready in less than an hour. He +put on his bejewelled watch-chain; then he put a pair of little pistols, +of the finest quality, in his overcoat pocket; then he sent the valet +away, and opening his desk, he counted up what funds he had left. Ten +thousand and some hundreds of francs remained. He might with this sum +take a journey, prolong his life two or three months; but he repelled +with disdain the thought of a miserable subterfuge, of a reprieve in +disguise. He imagined that with this money he might make a great show of +generosity, which would be talked of in the world; it would be +chivalrous to breakfast with his inamorata and make her a present of +this money at dessert. During the meal he would be full of nervous +gayety, of cynical humor, and then he would announce his intention to +kill himself. The girl would not fail to narrate the scene everywhere; +she would repeat his last conversation, his last will and gift; all the +cafes would buzz with it at night; the papers would be full of it. + +This idea strangely excited him, and comforted him at once. He was going +out, when his eyes fell upon the mass of papers in his desk. Perhaps +there was something there which might dim the positiveness of his +resolution. He emptied all the drawers without looking or choosing, and +put all the papers in the fire. He looked with pride upon this +conflagration; there were bills, love letters, business letters, bonds, +patents of nobility, deeds of property. Was it not his brilliant past +which flickered and consumed in the fireplace? + +The bailiff occurred to him, and he hastily descended. He was the most +polite of bailiffs, a man of taste and wit, a friend of artists, himself +a poet at times. He had already seized eight horses in the stables with +all their harness and trappings, and five carriages with their equipage, +in the carriage-house. + +"I'm going on slowly, Count," said he bowing. "Perhaps you wish to +arrest the execution. The sum is large, to be sure, but a man in your +position--" + +"Believe that you are here because it suits me," interrupted Hector, +proudly, "this house doesn't suit me; I shall never enter it again. So, +as you are master, go on." + +And wheeling round on his heel he went off. + +The astonished bailiff proceeded with his work. He went from room to +room, admiring and seizing. He seized cups gained at the races, +collections of pipes and arms, and the library, containing many +sporting-books, superbly bound. + +Meanwhile the Count de Tremorel, who was resolved more than ever on +suicide, ascending the boulevards came to his inamorata's house, which +was near the Madeleine. He had introduced her some six months before +into the demi-monde as Jenny Fancy. Her real name was Pelagie Taponnet, +and although the count did not know it, she was his valet's sister. She +was pretty and lively, with delicate hands and a tiny foot, superb +chestnut hair, white teeth, and great impertinent black eyes, which were +languishing, caressing, or provoking, at will. She had passed suddenly +from the most abject poverty to a state of extravagant luxury. This +brilliant change did not astonish her as much as you might think. +Forty-eight hours after her removal to her new apartments, she had +established order among the servants; she made them obey a glance or a +gesture; and she made her dress-makers and milliners submit with good +grace to her orders. Jenny soon began to languish, in her fine rooms, +for new excitement; her gorgeous toilets no longer amused her. A woman's +happiness is not complete unless seasoned by the jealousy of rivals. +Jenny's rivals lived in the Faubourg du Temple, near the barrier; they +could not envy her splendor, for they did not know her, and she was +strictly forbidden to associate with and so dazzle them. As for +Tremorel, Jenny submitted to him from necessity. He seemed to her the +most tiresome of men. She thought his friends the dreariest of beings. +Perhaps she perceived beneath their ironically polite manner, a contempt +for her, and understood of how little consequence she was to these rich +people, these high livers, gamblers, men of the world. Her pleasures +comprised an evening with someone of her own class, card-playing, at +which she won, and a midnight supper. The rest of the time she suffered +ennui. She was wearied to death: A hundred times she was on the point of +discarding Tremorel, abandoning all this luxury, money, servants, and +resuming her old life. Many a time she packed up; her vanity always +checked her at the last moment. + +Hector de Tremorel rang at her door at eleven on the morning in +question. She did not expect him so early, and she was evidently +surprised when he told her he had come to breakfast, and asked her to +hasten the cook, as he was in a great hurry. + +She had never, she thought, seen him so amiable, so gay. All through +breakfast he sparkled, as he promised himself he would, with spirit and +fun. At last, while they were sipping their coffee, Hector spoke: + +"All this, my dear, is only a preface, intended to prepare you for a +piece of news which will surprise you. I am a ruined man." + +She looked at him with amazement, not seeming to comprehend him. + +"I said--ruined," said he, laughing bitterly, "as ruined as man can be." + +"Oh, you are making fun of me, joking--" + +"I never spoke so seriously in my life. It seems strange to you, doesn't +it? Yet it's sober truth." + +Jenny's large eyes continued to interrogate him. + +"Why," he continued, with lofty carelessness, "life, you know, is like a +bunch of grapes, which one either eats gradually, piece by piece, or +squeezes into a glass to be tossed off at a gulp. I've chosen the latter +way. My grape was four million francs; they are drunk up to the dregs. I +don't regret them, I've had a jolly life for my money. But now I can +flatter myself that I am as much of a beggar as any beggar in France. +Everything at my house is in the bailiff's hands--I am without a +domicile, without a penny." + +He spoke with increasing animation as the multitude of diverse thoughts +passed each other tumultuously in his brain. And he was not playing a +part. He was speaking in all good faith. + +"But--then--" stammered Jenny. + +"What? Are you free? Just so--" + +She hardly knew whether to rejoice or mourn. + +"Yes," he continued, "I give you back your liberty." + +Jenny made a gesture which Hector misunderstood. + +"Oh! be quiet," he added quickly, "I sha'n't leave you thus; I would not +desert you in a state of need. This furniture is yours, and I have +provided for you besides. Here in my pocket are five hundred napoleons; +it is my all; I have brought it to give to you." + +He passed the money over to her on a plate, laughingly, imitating the +restaurant waiters. She pushed it back with a shudder. + +"Oh, well," said he, "that's a good sign, my dear; very good, very good. +I've always thought and said that you were a good girl--in fact, too +good; you needed correcting." + +She did, indeed, have a good heart; for instead of taking Hector's +bank-notes and turning him out of doors, she tried to comfort and +console him. Since he had confessed to her that he was penniless, she +ceased to hate him, and even commenced to love him. Hector, homeless, +was no longer the dreaded man who paid to be master, the millionnaire +who, by a caprice, had raised her from the gutter. He was no longer the +execrated tyrant. Ruined, he descended from his pedestal, he became a +man like others, to be preferred to others, as a handsome and gallant +youth. Then Jenny mistook the last artifice of a discarded vanity for a +generous impulse of the heart, and was deeply touched by this splendid +last gift. + +"You are not as poor as you say," she said, "for you still have so large +a sum." + +"But, dear child, I have several times given as much for diamonds which +you envied." + +She reflected a moment, then as if an idea had struck her, exclaimed: + +"That's true enough; but I can spend, oh, a great deal less, and yet be +just as happy. Once, before I knew you, when I was young (she was now +nineteen), ten thousand francs seemed to me to be one of those fabulous +sums which were talked about, but which few men ever saw in one pile, +and fewer still held in their hands." + +She tried to slip the money into the count's pocket; but he prevented +it. + +"Come, take it back, keep it--" + +"What shall I do with it?" + +"I don't know, but wouldn't this money bring in more? Couldn't you +speculate on the Bourse, bet at the races, play at Baden, or something? +I've heard of people that are now rich as kings, who commenced with +nothing, and hadn't your talents either. Why don't you do as they did?" + +She spoke excitedly, as a woman does who is anxious to persuade. He +looked at her, astonished to find her so sensitive, so disinterested. + +"You will, won't you?" she insisted, "now, won't you?" + +"You are a good girl," said he, charmed with her, "but you must take +this money. I give it to you, don't be worried about anything." + +"But you--have you still any money? What have you?" + +"I have yet--" + +He stopped, searched his pockets, and counted the money in his purse. + +"Faith, here's three hundred and forty francs--more than I need. I must +give some napoleons to your servants before I go." + +"And what for Heaven's sake will become of you?" + +He sat back in his chair, negligently stroked his handsome beard, and +said: + +"I am going to blow my brains out." + +"Oh!" + +Hector thought that she doubted what he said. He took his pistols out of +his pockets, showed them to her, and went on: + +"You see these toys? Well, when I leave you, I shall go somewhere--no +matter where--put the muzzle to my temple, thus, press the trigger--and +all will be over!" + +She gazed at him, her eyes dilated with terror, pale, breathing hard and +fast. But at the same time, she admired him. She marvelled at so much +courage, at this calm, this careless railing tone. What superb disdain +of life! To exhaust his fortune and then kill himself, without a cry, a +tear, or a regret, seemed to her an act of heroism unheard of, +unexampled. It seemed to her that a new, unknown, beautiful, radiant man +stood before her. She loved him as she had never loved before! + +"No!" she cried, "no! It shall not be!" + +And rising suddenly, she rushed to him and seized him by the arm. + +"You will not kill yourself, will you? Promise me, swear it to me. It +isn't possible, you would not! I love you--I couldn't bear you before. +Oh, I did not know you, but now--come, we will be happy. You, who have +lived with millions don't know how much ten thousand francs are--but I +know. We can live a long time on that, and very well, too. Then, if we +are obliged to sell the useless things--the horses, carriages, my +diamonds, my green cashmere, we can have three or four times that sum. +Thirty thousand francs--it's a fortune! Think how many happy days--" + +The Count de Tremorel shook his head, smilingly. He was ravished; his +vanity was flattered by the heat of the passion which beamed from the +poor girl's eyes. How he was beloved! How he would be regretted! What a +hero the world was about to lose! + +"For we will not stay here," Jenny went on, "we will go and conceal +ourselves far from Paris, in a little cottage. Why, on the other side of +Belleville you can get a place surrounded by gardens for a thousand +francs a year. How well off we should be there! You would never leave +me, for I should be jealous--oh, so jealous! We wouldn't have any +servants, and you should see that I know how to keep house." + +Hector said nothing. + +"While the money lasts," continued Jenny, "we'll laugh away the days. +When it's all gone, if you are still decided, you will kill +yourself--that is, we will kill ourselves together. But not with a +pistol--No! We'll light a pan of charcoal, sleep in one another's arms, +and that will be the end. They say one doesn't suffer that way at all." + +This idea drew Hector from his torpor, and awoke in him a recollection +which ruffled all his vanity. + +Three or four days before, he had read in a paper the account of the +suicide of a cook, who, in a fit of love and despair, had bravely +suffocated himself in his garret. Before dying he had written a most +touching letter to his faithless love. The idea of killing himself like +a cook made him shudder. He saw the possibility of the horrible +comparison. How ridiculous! And the Count de Tremorel had a wholesome +fear of ridicule. To suffocate himself, at Belleville, with a grisette, +how dreadful! He almost rudely pushed Jenny's arms away, and repulsed +her. + +"Enough of that sort of thing," said he, in his careless tone. "What you +say, child, is all very pretty, but utterly absurd. A man of my name +dies, and doesn't choke." And taking the bank-notes from his pocket, +where Jenny had slipped them, he threw them on the table. + +"Now, good-by." + +He would have gone, but Jenny, red and with glistening eyes, barred the +door with her body. + +"You shall not go!" she cried, "I won't have you; you are mine--for I +love you; if you take one step, I will scream." + +The count shrugged his shoulders. + +"But we must end all this!" + +"You sha'n't go!" + +"Well, then, I'll blow my brains out here." And taking out one of his +pistols, he held it to his forehead, adding, "If you call out and don't +let me pass, I shall fire." He meant the threat for earnest. + +But Jenny did not call out; she could not; she uttered a deep groan and +fainted. + +"At last!" muttered Hector, replacing the pistol in his pocket. + +He went out, not taking time to lift her from the floor where she had +fallen, and shut the door. Then he called the servants into the +vestibule, gave them ten napoleons to divide among them, and hastened +away. + + + + +XIII + + +The Count de Tremorel, having reached the street, ascended the +boulevard. All of a sudden he bethought him of his friends. The story of +the execution must have already spread. + +"No; not that way," he muttered. + +This was because, on the boulevard, he would certainly meet some of his +very dear cronies, and he desired to escape their condolence and offers +of service. He pictured to himself their sorry visages, concealing a +hidden and delicious satisfaction. He had wounded so many vanities that +he must look for terrible revenges. The friends of an insolently +prosperous man are rejoiced in his downfall. + +Hector crossed the street, went along the Rue Duphot, and reached the +quays. Where was he going? He did not know, and did not even ask +himself. He walked at random, enjoying the physical content which +follows a good meal, happy to find himself still in the land of the +living, in the soft April sunlight. + +The weather was superb, and all Paris was out of doors. There was a +holiday air about the town. The flower-women at the corners of the +bridges had their baskets full of odorous violets. The count bought a +bouquet near the Pont Neuf and stuck it in his button-hole, and without +waiting for his change, passed on. He reached the large square at the +end of the Bourdon boulevard, which is always full of jugglers and +curiosity shows; here the noise, the music, drew him from his torpor, +and brought his thoughts back to his present situation. + +"I must leave Paris," thought he. + +He crossed toward the Orleans station at a quicker pace. He entered the +waiting-room, and asked what time the train left for Etampes. Why did he +choose Etampes? A train had just gone, and there would not be another +one for two hours. He was much annoyed at this, and as he could not wait +there two hours, he wended his way, to kill time, toward the Jardin des +Plantes. He had not been there for ten or twelve years--not since, when +at school, his teachers had brought him there to look at the animals. +Nothing had changed. There were the groves and parterres, the lawns and +lanes, the beasts and birds, as before. The principal avenue was nearly +deserted. He took a seat opposite the mineralogical museum. He reflected +on his position. He glanced back through the departed years, and did not +find one day among those many days which had left him one of those +gracious memories which delight and console. Millions had slipped +through his prodigal hands, and he could not recall a single useful +expenditure, a really generous one, amounting to twenty francs. He, who +had had so many friends, searched his memory in vain for the name of a +single friend whom he regretted to part from. The past seemed to him +like a faithful mirror; he was surprised, startled at the folly of the +pleasures, the inane delights, which had been the end and aim of his +existence. For what had he lived? For others. + +"Ah, what a fool I was!" he muttered, "what a fool!" + +After living for others, he was going to kill himself for others. His +heart became softened. Who would think of him, eight days hence? Not one +living being. Yes--Jenny, perhaps. Yet, no. She would be consoled with a +new lover in less than a week. + +The bell for closing the garden rang. Night had come, and a thick and +damp mist had covered the city. The count, chilled to the bones, left +his seat. + +"To the station again," muttered he. + +It was a horrible idea to him now--this of shooting himself in the +silence and obscurity of the forest. He pictured to himself his +disfigured body, bleeding, lying on the edge of some ditch. Beggars or +robbers would despoil him. And then? The police would come and take up +this unknown body, and doubtless would carry it, to be identified, to +the Morgue. "Never!" cried he, at this thought, "no, never!" + +How die, then? He reflected, and it struck him that he would kill +himself in some second-class hotel on the left bank of the Seine. + +"Yes, that's it," said he to himself. + +Leaving the garden with the last of the visitors, he wended his way +toward the Latin Quarter. The carelessness which he had assumed in the +morning gave way to a sad resignation. He was suffering; his head was +heavy, and he was cold. + +"If I shouldn't die to-night," he thought, "I shall have a terrible cold +in the morning." + +This mental sally did not make him smile, but it gave him the +consciousness of being firm and determined. He went into the Rue +Dauphine and looked about for a hotel. Then it occurred to him that it +was not yet seven o'clock, and it might arouse suspicions if he asked +for a room at that early hour. He reflected that he still had over one +hundred francs, and resolved to dine. It should be his last meal. He +went into a restaurant and ordered it. But he in vain tried to throw off +the anxious sadness which filled him. He drank, and consumed three +bottles of wine without changing the current of his thoughts. + +The waiters were surprised to see him scarcely touch the dishes set +before him, and growing more gloomy after each potation. His dinner cost +ninety francs; he threw his last hundred-franc note on the table, and +went out. As it was not yet late, he went into another restaurant where +some students were drinking, and sat down at a table in the farther +corner of the room. He ordered coffee and rapidly drank three or four +cups. He wished to excite himself, to screw up his courage to do what he +had resolved upon; but he could not; the drink seemed only to make him +more and more irresolute. + +A waiter, seeing him alone at the table, offered him a newspaper. He +took it mechanically, opened it, and read: + +"Just as we are going to press, we learn that a well-known person has +disappeared, after announcing his intention to commit suicide. The +statements made to us are so strange, that we defer details till +to-morrow, not having time to send for fuller information now." + +These lines startled Hector. They were his death sentence, not to be +recalled, signed by the tyrant whose obsequious courtier he had always +been--public opinion. + +"They will never cease talking about me," he muttered angrily. Then he +added, firmly, "Come, I must make an end of this." + +He soon reached the Hotel Luxembourg. He rapped at the door, and was +speedily conducted to the best room in the house. He ordered a fire to +be lighted. He also asked for sugar and water, and writing materials. At +this moment he was as firm as in the morning. + +"I must not hesitate," he muttered, "nor recoil from my fate." + +He sat down at the table near the fireplace, and wrote in a firm hand a +declaration which he destined for the police. + +"No one must be accused of my death," he commenced; and he went on by +asking that the hotel-keeper should be indemnified. + +The hour by the clock was five minutes before eleven; he placed his +pistols on the mantel. + +"I will shoot myself at midnight," thought he. "I have yet an hour to +live." + +The count threw himself in an arm-chair and buried his face in his +hands. Why did he not kill himself at once? Why impose on himself this +hour of waiting, of anguish and torture? He could not have told. He +began again to think over the events of his life, reflecting on the +headlong rapidity of the occurrences which had brought him to that +wretched room. How time had passed! It seemed but yesterday that he +first began to borrow. It does little good, however, to a man who has +fallen to the bottom of the abyss, to know the causes why he fell. + +The large hand of the clock had passed the half hour after eleven. + +He thought of the newspaper item which he had just read. Who furnished +the information? Doubtless it was Jenny. She had come to her senses, +tearfully hastened after him. When she failed to find him on the +boulevard, she had probably gone to his house, then to his club, then to +some of his friends. So that to-night, at this very moment, the world +was discussing him. + +"Have you heard the news?" + +"Ah, yes, poor Tremorel! What a romance! A good fellow, only--" + +He thought he heard this "only" greeted with laughter and innuendoes. +Time passed on. The ringing vibration of the clock was at hand; the hour +had come. + +The count got up, seized his pistols, and placed himself near the bed, +so as not to fall on the floor. + +The first stroke of twelve; he did not fire. + +Hector was a man of courage; his reputation for bravery was high. He had +fought at least ten duels; and his cool bearing on the ground had always +been admiringly remarked. One day he had killed a man, and that night he +slept very soundly. + +But he did not fire. + +There are two kinds of courage. One, false courage, is that meant for +the public eye, which needs the excitement of the struggle, the stimulus +of rage, and the applause of lookers-on. The other, true courage, +despises public opinion, obeys conscience, not passion; success does not +sway it, it does its work noiselessly. + +Two minutes after twelve--Hector still held the pistol against his +forehead. + +"Am I going to be afraid?" he asked himself. + +He was afraid, but would not confess it to himself. He put his pistols +back on the table and returned to his seat near the fire. All his limbs +were trembling. + +"It's nervousness," he muttered. "It'll pass off." + +He gave himself till one o'clock. He tried to convince himself of the +necessity of committing suicide. If he did not, what would become of +him? How would he live? Must he make up his mind to work? Besides, could +he appear in the world, when all Paris knew of his intention? This +thought goaded him to fury; he had a sudden courage, and grasped his +pistols. But the sensation which the touch of the cold steel gave him, +caused him to drop his arm and draw away shuddering. + +"I cannot," repeated he, in his anguish. "I cannot!" + +The idea of the physical pain of shooting himself filled him with +horror. Why had he not a gentler death? Poison, or perhaps +charcoal--like the little cook? He did not fear the ludicrousness of +this now; all that he feared was, that the courage to kill himself would +fail him. + +He went on extending his time of grace from half-hour to half-hour. It +was a horrible night, full of the agony of the last night of the +criminal condemned to the scaffold. He wept with grief and rage and +wrung his hands and prayed. Toward daylight he fell exhausted into an +uneasy slumber, in his arm-chair. He was awakened by three or four heavy +raps on the door, which he hastily opened. It was the waiter, who had +come to take his order for breakfast, and who started back with +amazement on seeing Hector, so disordered was his clothing and so livid +the pallor of his features. + +"I want nothing," said the count. "I'm going down." + +He had just enough money left to pay his bill, and six sous for the +waiter. He quitted the hotel where he had suffered so much, without end +or aim in view. He was more resolved than ever to die, only he yearned +for several days of respite to nerve himself for the deed. But how could +he live during these days? He had not so much as a centime left. An idea +struck him--the pawnbrokers! + +He knew that at the Monte-de-Piete* a certain amount would be advanced +to him on his jewelry. But where find a branch office? He dared not ask, +but hunted for one at hazard. He now held his head up, walked with a +firmer step; he was seeking something, and had a purpose to accomplish. +He at last saw the sign of the Monte-de-Piete on a house in the Rue +Conde, and entered. The hall was small, damp, filthy, and full of +people. But if the place was gloomy, the borrowers seemed to take their +misfortunes good-humoredly. They were mostly students and women, talking +gayly as they waited for their turns. The Count de Tremorel advanced +with his watch, chain, and a brilliant diamond that he had taken from +his finger. He was seized with the timidity of misery, and did not know +how to open his business. A young woman pitied his embarrassment. + +[* The public pawnbroker establishment of Paris, which has branch +bureaus through the city.] + +"See," said she, "put your articles on this counter, before that window +with green curtains." + +A moment after he heard a voice which seemed to proceed from the next +room: + +"Twelve hundred francs for the watch and ring." + +This large amount produced such a sensation as to arrest all the +conversation. All eyes were turned toward the millionnaire who was going +to pocket such a fortune. The millionnaire made no response. + +The same woman who had spoken before nudged his arm. + +"That's for you," said she. "Answer whether you will take it or not." + +"I'll take it," cried Hector. + +He was filled with a joy which made him forget the night's torture. +Twelve hundred francs! How many days it would last! Had he not heard +there were clerks who hardly got that in a year? + +Hector waited a long time, when one of the clerks, who was writing at a +desk, called out: + +"Whose are the twelve hundred francs?" + +The count stepped forward. + +"Mine," said he. + +"Your name?" + +Hector hesitated. He would never give his name aloud in such a place as +this. He gave the first name that occurred to him. + +"Durand." + +"Where are your papers?" + +"What papers?" + +"A passport, a receipt for lodgings, a license to hunt--" + +"I haven't any." + +"Go for them, or bring two well-known witnesses." + +"But--" + +"There is no 'but.' The next--" + +Hector was provoked by the clerk's abrupt manner. + +"Well, then," said he, "give me back the jewelry." + +The clerk looked at him jeeringly. + +"Can't be done. No goods that are registered, can be returned without +proof of rightful possession." So saying, he went on with his work. "One +French shawl, thirty-five francs, whose is it?" + +Hector meanwhile went out of the establishment. He had never suffered so +much, had never imagined that one could suffer so much. After this ray +of hope, so abruptly put out, the clouds lowered over him thicker and +more hopelessly. He was worse off than the shipwrecked sailor; the +pawnbroker had taken his last resources. All the romance with which he +had invested the idea of his suicide now vanished, leaving bare the +stern and ignoble reality. He must kill himself, not like the gay +gamester who voluntarily leaves upon the roulette table the remains of +his fortune, but like the Greek, who surprised and hunted, knows that +every door will be shut upon him. His death would not be voluntary; he +could neither hesitate nor choose the fatal hour; he must kill himself +because he had not the means of living one day longer. + +And life never before seemed to him so sweet a thing as now. He never +felt so keenly the exuberance of his youth and strength. He suddenly +discovered all about him a crowd of pleasures each more enviable than +the others, which he had never tasted. He who flattered himself that he +had squeezed life to press out its pleasures, had not really lived. He +had had all that is to be bought or sold, nothing of what is given or +achieved. He already not only regretted giving the ten thousand francs +to Jenny, but the two hundred francs to the servants--nay the six sous +given to the waiter at the restaurant, even the money he had spent on +the bunch of violets. The bouquet still hung in his buttonhole, faded +and shrivelled. What good did it do him? While the sous which he had +paid for it--! He did not think of his wasted millions, but could not +drive away the thought of that wasted franc! + +True, he might, if he chose, find plenty of money still, and easily. He +had only to return quietly to his house, to discharge the bailiffs, and +to resume the possession of his remaining effects. But he would thus +confront the world, and confess his terrors to have overcome him at the +last moment; he would have to suffer glances more cruel than the +pistol-ball. The world must not be deceived; when a man announces that +he is going to kill himself--he must kill himself. + +So Hector was going to die because he had said he would, because the +newspapers had announced the fact. He confessed this to himself as he +went along, and bitterly reproached himself. + +He remembered a pretty spot in Viroflay forest, where he had once fought +a duel; he would commit the deed there. He hastened toward it. The +weather was fine and he met many groups of young people going into the +country for a good time. Workmen were drinking and clinking their +glasses under the trees along the river-bank. All seemed happy and +contented, and their gayety seemed to insult Hector's wretchedness. He +left the main road at the Sevres bridge, and descending the embankment +reached the borders of the Seine. Kneeling down, he took up some water +in the palm of his hand, and drank--an invincible lassitude crept over +him. He sat, or rather fell, upon the sward. The fever of despair came, +and death now seemed to him a refuge, which he could almost welcome with +joy. Some feet above him the windows of a Sevres restaurant opened +toward the river. He could be seen from there, as well as from the +bridge; but he did not mind this, nor anything else. + +"As well here, as elsewhere," he said to himself. + +He had just drawn his pistol out, when he heard someone call: + +"Hector! Hector!" + +He jumped up at a bound, concealed the pistol, and looked about. A man +was running down the embankment toward him with outstretched arms. This +was a man of his own age, rather stout, but well shaped, with a fine +open face and, large black eyes in which one read frankness and +good-nature; one of those men who are sympathetic at first sight, whom +one loves on a week's acquaintance. + +Hector recognized him. It was his oldest friend, a college mate; they +had once been very intimate, but the count not finding the other fast +enough for him, had little by little dropped his intimacy, and had now +lost sight of him for two years. + +"Sauvresy!" he exclaimed, stupefied. + +"Yes," said the young man, hot, and out of breath, "I've been watching +you the last two minutes; what were you doing here?" + +"Why--nothing." + +"How! What they told me at your house this morning was true, then! I +went there." + +"What did they say?" + +"That nobody knew what had become of you, and that you declared to Jenny +when you left her the night before that you were going to blow your +brains out. The papers have already announced your death, with details." + +This news seemed to have a great effect on the count. + +"You see, then," he answered tragically, "that I must kill myself!" + +"Why? In order to save the papers from the inconvenience of correcting +their error." + +"People will say that I shrunk--" + +"Oh, 'pon my word now! According to you, a man must make a fool of +himself because it has been reported that he would do it. Absurd, old +fellow. What do you want to kill yourself for?" + +Hector reflected; he almost saw the possibility of living. + +"I am ruined," answered he, sadly. + +"And it's for this that--stop, my friend, let me tell you, you are an +ass! Ruined! It's a misfortune, but when a man is of your age he +rebuilds his fortune. Besides, you aren't as ruined as you say, because +I've got an income of a hundred thousand francs." + +"A hundred thousand francs--" + +"Well, my fortune is in land, which brings in about four per cent." + +Tremorel knew that his friend was rich, but not that he was as rich as +this. He answered with a tinge of envy in his tone: + +"Well, I had more than that; but I had no breakfast this morning." + +"And you did not tell me! But true, you are in a pitiable state; come +along, quick!" + +And he led him toward the restaurant. + +Tremorel reluctantly followed this friend, who had just saved his life. +He was conscious of having been surprised in a distressingly ridiculous +situation. If a man who is resolved to blow his brains out is accosted, +he presses the trigger, he doesn't conceal his pistol. There was one +alone, among all his friends, who loved him enough not to see the +ludicrousness of his position; one alone generous enough not to torture +him with raillery; it was Sauvresy. + +But once seated before a well-filled table, Hector could not preserve +his rigidity. He felt the joyous expansion of spirit which follows +assured safety after terrible peril. He was himself, young again, once +more strong. He told Sauvresy everything; his vain boasting, his terror +at the last moment, his agony at the hotel, his fury, remorse, and +anguish at the pawnbroker's. + +"Ah!" said he. "You have saved me! You are my friend, my only friend, my +brother." + +They talked for more than two hours. + +"Come," said Sauvresy at last, "let us arrange our plans. You want to +disappear awhile; I see that. But to-night you must write four lines to +the papers. To-morrow I propose to take your affairs in hand, that's a +thing I know how to do. I don't know exactly how you stand; but I will +agree to save something from the wreck. We've got money, you see; your +creditors will be easy with us." + +"But where shall I go?" asked Hector, whom the mere idea of isolation +terrified. + +"What? You'll come home with me, parbleu, to Valfeuillu. Don't you know +that I am married? Ah, my friend, a happier man than I does not exist! +I've married--for love--the loveliest and best of women. You will be a +brother to us. But come, my carriage is right here near the door." + + + + +XIV + + +M. Plantat stopped. His companions had not suffered a gesture or a word +to interrupt him. M. Lecoq, as he listened, reflected. He asked himself +where M. Plantat could have got all these minute details. Who had +written Tremorel's terrible biography? As he glanced at the papers from +which Plantat read, he saw that they were not all in the same +handwriting. + +The old justice of the peace pursued the story: + +Bertha Lechaillu, though by an unhoped-for piece of good fortune she had +become Madame Sauvresy, did not love her husband. She was the daughter +of a poor country school-master, whose highest ambition had been to be +an assistant teacher in a Versailles school; yet she was not now +satisfied. Absolute queen of one of the finest domains in the land, +surrounded by every luxury, spending as she pleased, beloved, adored, +she was not content. Her life, so well regulated, so constantly smooth, +without annoyances and disturbance, seemed to her insipid. There were +always the same monotonous pleasures, always recurring each in its +season. There were parties and receptions, horse rides, hunts, +drives--and it was always thus! Alas, this was not the life she had +dreamed of; she was born for more exciting pleasures. She yearned for +unknown emotions and sensations, the unforeseen, abrupt transitions, +passions, adventures. She had not liked Sauvresy from the first day she +saw him, and her secret aversion to him increased in proportion as her +influence over him grew more certain. She thought him common, vulgar, +ridiculous. She thought the simplicity of his manners, silliness. She +looked at him, and saw nothing in him to admire. She did not listen to +him when he spoke, having already decided in her wisdom that he could +say nothing that was not tedious or commonplace. She was angry that he +had not been a wild young man, the terror of his family. + +He had, however, done as other young men do. He had gone to Paris and +tried the sort of life which his friend Tremorel led. He had enough of +it in six months, and hastily returned to Valfeuillu, to rest after such +laborious pleasures. The experience cost him a hundred thousand francs, +but he said he did not regret purchasing it at this price. + +Bertha was wearied with the constancy and adoration of her husband. She +had only to express a desire to be at once obeyed, and this blind +submission to all her wishes appeared to her servile in a man. A man is +born, she thought, to command, and not to obey; to be master, and not +slave. She would have preferred a husband who would come in in the +middle of the night, still warm from his orgy, having lost at play, and +who would strike her if she upbraided him. A tyrant, but a man. Some +months after her marriage she suddenly took it into her head to have +absurd freaks and extravagant caprices. She wished to prove him, and see +how far his constant complacence would go. She thought she would tire +him out. It was intolerable to feel absolutely sure of her husband, to +know that she so filled his heart that he had room for no other, to have +nothing to fear, not even the caprice of an hour. Perhaps there was yet +more than this in Bertha's aversion. She knew herself, and confessed to +herself that had Sauvresy wished, she would have been his without being +his wife. She was so lonely at her father's, so wretched in her poverty, +that she would have fled from her home, even for this. And she despised +her husband because he had not despised her enough! + +People were always telling her that she was the happiest of women. +Happy! And there were days when she wept when she thought that she was +married. Happy! There were times when she longed to fly, to seek +adventure and pleasure, all that she yearned for, what she had not had +and never would have. The fear of poverty--which she knew +well--restrained her. This fear was caused in part by a wise precaution +which her father, recently dead, had taken. Sauvresy wished to insert in +the marriage-contract a settlement of five hundred thousand francs on +his affianced. The worthy Lechailin had opposed this generous act. + +"My daughter," he said, "brings you nothing. Settle forty thousand +francs on her if you will, not a sou more; otherwise there shall be no +marriage." + +As Sauvresy insisted, the old man added: + +"I hope that she will be a good and worthy wife; if so, your fortune +will be hers. But if she is not, forty thousand francs will be none too +little for her. Of course, if you are afraid that you will die first, +you can make a will." + +Sauvresy was forced to yield. Perhaps the worthy school-master knew his +daughter; if so he was the only one. Never did so consummate a hypocrisy +minister to so profound a perversity, and a depravity so inconceivable +in a young and seemingly innocent girl. If, at the bottom of her heart, +she thought herself the most wretched of women, there was nothing of it +apparent--it was a well-kept secret. She knew how to show to her +husband, in place of the love she did not feel, the appearance of a +passion at once burning and modest, betraying furtive glances and a +flush as of pleasure, when he entered the room. + +All the world said: + +"Bertha is foolishly fond of her husband." + +Sauvresy was sure of it, and he was the first to say, not caring to +conceal his joy: + +"My wife adores me." + +Such were man and wife at Valfeuillu when Sauvresy found Tremorel on the +banks of the Seine with a pistol in his hand. Sauvresy missed his dinner +that evening for the first time since his marriage, though he had +promised to be prompt, and the meal was kept waiting for him. Bertha +might have been anxious about this delay; she was only indignant at what +she called inconsiderateness. She was asking herself how she should +punish her husband, when, at ten o'clock at night, the drawing-room door +was abruptly thrown open, and Sauvresy stood smiling upon the threshold. + +"Bertha," said he, "I've brought you an apparition." + +She scarcely deigned to raise her head. Sauvresy continued: + +"An apparition whom you know, of whom I have often spoken to you, whom +you will like because I love him, and because he is my oldest comrade, +my best friend." + +And standing aside, he gently pushed Hector into the room. + +"Madame Sauvresy, permit me to present to you Monsieur the Count de +Tremorel." + +Bertha rose suddenly, blushing, confused, agitated by an indefinable +emotion, as if she saw in reality an apparition. For the first time in +her life she was abashed, and did not dare to raise her large, clear +blue eyes. + +"Monsieur," she stammered, "you are welcome." + +She knew Tremorel's name well. Sauvresy had often mentioned it, and she +had seen it often in the papers, and had heard it in the drawing-rooms +of all her friends. He who bore it seemed to her, after what she had +heard a great personage. He was, according to his reputation, a hero of +another age, a social Don Quixote, a terribly fast man of the world. He +was one of those men whose lives astonish common people, whom the +well-to-do citizen thinks faithless and lawless, whose extravagant +passions overleap the narrow bounds of social prejudice; a man who +tyrannizes over others, whom all fear, who fights on the slightest +provocation, who scatters gold with a prodigal hand, whose iron health +resists the most terrible excesses. She had often in her miserable +reveries tried to imagine what kind of man this Count de Tremorel was. +She awarded him with such qualities as she desired for her fancied hero, +with whom she could fly from her husband in search of new adventures. +And now, of a sudden, he appeared before her. + +"Give Hector your hand, dear," said Sauvresy. She held out her hand, +which Tremorel lightly pressed, and his touch seemed to give her an +electric shock. + +Sauvresy threw himself into an arm-chair. + +"You see, Bertha," said he, "our friend Hector is exhausted with the +life he has been leading. He has been advised to rest, and has come to +seek it here, with us." + +"But, dear," responded Bertha, "aren't you afraid that the count will be +bored a little here?" + +"Why?" + +"Valfeuillu is very quiet, and we are but dull country folks." + +Bertha talked for the sake of talking, to break a silence which +embarrassed her, to make Tremorel speak, and hear his voice. As she +talked she observed him, and studied the impression she made on him. Her +radiant beauty usually struck those who saw her for the first time with +open admiration. He remained impassible. She recognized the worn-out +rake of title, the fast man who has tried, experienced, exhausted all +things, in his coldness and superb indifference. And because he did not +admire her she admired him the more. + +"What a difference," thought she, "between him and that vulgar Sauvresy, +who is surprised at everything, whose face shows all that he thinks, +whose eye betrays what he is going to say before he opens his mouth." + +Bertha was mistaken. Hector was not as cold and indifferent as she +imagined. He was simply wearied, utterly exhausted. He could scarcely +sit up after the terrible excitements of the last twenty-four hours. He +soon asked permission to retire. Sauvresy, when left alone with his +wife, told her all that happened, and the events which resulted in +Tremorel's coming to Valfeuillu; but like a true friend omitted +everything that would cast ridicule upon his old comrade. + +"He's a big child," said he, "a foolish fellow, whose brain is weak but +we'll take care of him and cure him." + +Bertha never listened to her husband so attentively before. She seemed +to agree with him, but she really admired Tremorel. Like Jenny, she was +struck with the heroism which could squander a fortune and then commit +suicide. + +"Ah!" sighed she, "Sauvresy would not have done it!" + +No, Sauvresy was quite a different man from the Count de Tremorel. The +next day he declared his intention to adjust his friend's affairs. +Hector had slept well, having spent the night on an excellent bed, +undisturbed by pressing anxieties; and he appeared in the morning sleek +and well-dressed, the disorder and desperation of the previous evening +having quite disappeared. He had a nature not deeply impressible by +events; twenty-four hours consoled him for the worst catastrophes, and +he soon forgot the severest lessons of life. If Sauvresy had bid him +begone, he would not have known where to go; yet he had already resumed +the haughty carelessness of the millionnaire, accustomed to bend men and +circumstances to his will. He was once more calm and cold, coolly +joking, as if years had passed since that night at the hotel, and as if +all the disasters to his fortune had been repaired. Bertha was amazed at +this tranquillity after such great reverses, and thought this childish +recklessness force of character. + +"Now," said Sauvresy, "as I've become your man of business, give me my +instructions, and some valuable hints. What is, or was, the amount of +your fortune?" + +"I haven't the least idea." + +Sauvresy provided himself with a pencil and a large sheet of paper, +ready to set down the figures. He seemed a little surprised. + +"All right," said he, "we'll put x down as the unknown quantity of the +assets: now for the liabilities." + +Hector made a superbly disdainful gesture. + +"Don't know, I'm sure, what they are." + +"What, can't you give a rough guess?" + +"Oh, perhaps. For instance, I owe between five and six hundred thousand +francs to Clair & Co., five hundred thousand to Dervoy; about as much to +Dubois, of Orleans--" + +"Well?" + +"I can't remember any more." + +"But you must have a memorandum of your loans somewhere?" + +"No." + +"You have at least kept your bonds, bills, and the sums of your various +debts?" + +"None of them. I burnt up all my papers yesterday." + +Sauvresy jumped up from his chair in astonishment; such a method of +doing business seemed to him monstrous; he could not suppose that Hector +was lying. Yet he was lying, and this affectation of ignorance was a +conceit of the aristocratic man of the world. It was very noble, very +distingue, to ruin one's self without knowing how! + +"But, my dear fellow," cried Sauvresy, "how can we clear up your +affairs?" + +"Oh, don't clear them up at all; do as I do--let the creditors act as +they please, they will know how to settle it all, rest assured; let them +sell out my property." + +"Never! Then you would be ruined, indeed!" + +"Well, it's only a little more or a little less." + +"What splendid disinterestedness!" thought Bertha; "what coolness, what +admirable contempt of money, what noble disdain of the petty details +which annoy common people! Was Sauvresy capable of all this?" + +She could not at least accuse him of avarice, since for her he was as +prodigal as a thief; he had never refused her anything; he anticipated +her most extravagant fancies. Still he had a strong appetite for gain, +and despite his large fortune, he retained the hereditary respect for +money. When he had business with one of his farmers, he would rise very +early, mount his horse, though it were mid-winter, and go several +leagues in the snow to get a hundred crowns. He would have ruined +himself for her if she had willed it, this she was convinced of; but he +would have ruined himself economically, in an orderly way. + +Sauvresy reflected. + +"You are right," said he to Hector, "your creditors ought to know your +exact position. Who knows that they are not acting in concert? Their +simultaneous refusal to lend you a hundred thousand makes me suspect it. +I will go and see them." + +"Clair & Co., from whom I received my first loans, ought to be the best +informed." + +"Well, I will see Clair & Co. But look here, do you know what you would +do if you were reasonable?" + +"What?" + +"You would go to Paris with me, and both of us--" + +Hector turned very pale, and his eyes shone. + +"Never!" he interrupted, violently, "never!" + +His "dear friends" still terrified him. What! Reappear on the theatre of +his glory, now that he was fallen, ruined, ridiculous by his +unsuccessful suicide? Sauvresy had held out his arms to him. Sauvresy +was a noble fellow, and loved Hector sufficiently not to perceive the +falseness of his position, and not to judge him a coward because he +shrank from suicide. But the others!-- + +"Don't talk to me about Paris," said he in a calmer tone. "I shall never +set my foot in it again." + +"All right--so much the better; stay with us; I sha'n't complain of it, +nor my wife either. Some fine day we'll find you a pretty heiress in the +neighborhood. But," added Sauvresy, consulting his watch, "I must go if +I don't want to lose the train." + +"I'll go to the station with you," said Tremorel. + +This was not solely from a friendly impulse. He wanted to ask Sauvresy +to look after the articles left at the pawnbroker's in the Rue de Condo, +and to call on Jenny. Bertha, from her window, followed with her eyes +the two friends; who, with arms interlocked, ascended the road toward +Orcival. "What a difference," thought she, "between these two men! My +husband said he wished to be his friend's steward; truly he has the air +of a steward. What a noble gait the count has, what youthful ease, what +real distinction! And yet I'm sure that my husband despises him, because +he has ruined himself by dissipation. He affected--I saw it--an air of +protection. Poor youth! But everything about the count betrays an innate +or acquired superiority; even his name, Hector--how it sounds!" And she +repeated "Hector" several times, as if it pleased her, adding, +contemptuously, "My husband's name is Clement!" + +M. de Tremorel returned alone from the station, as gayly as a +convalescent taking his first airing. As soon as Bertha saw him she left +the window. She wished to remain alone, to reflect upon this event which +had happened so suddenly, to analyze her sensations, listen to her +presentiments, study her impressions and decide, if possible, upon her +line of conduct. She only reappeared when the tea was set for her +husband, who returned at eleven in the evening. Sauvresy was faint from +hunger, thirst, and fatigue, but his face glowed with satisfaction. + +"Victory!" exclaimed he, as he ate his soup. "We'll snatch you from the +hands of the Philistines yet. Parbleu! The finest feathers of your +plumage will remain, after all, and you will be able to save enough for +a good cosey nest." + +Bertha glanced at her husband. + +"How is that?" said she. + +"It's very simple. At the very first, I guessed the game of our friend's +creditors. They reckoned on getting a sale of his effects; would have +bought them in a lump dirt cheap, as it always happens, and then sold +them in detail, dividing the profits of the operation." + +"And can you prevent that?" asked Tremorel, incredulously. + +"Certainly. Ah, I've completely checkmated these gentlemen. I've +succeeded by chance--I had the good luck to get them all together this +evening. I said to them, you'll let us sell this property as we please, +voluntarily, or I'll outbid you all, and spoil your cards. They looked +at me in amazement. My notary, who was with me, remarked that I was +Monsieur Sauvresy, worth two millions. Our gentlemen opened their eyes +very wide, and consented to grant my request." + +Hector, notwithstanding what he had said, knew enough about his affairs +to see that this action would save him a fortune--a small one, as +compared with what he had possessed, yet a fortune. + +The certainty of this delighted him, and moved by a momentary and +sincere gratitude, he grasped both of Sauvresy's hands in his. + +"Ah, my friend," cried he, "you give me my honor, after saving my life! +How can I ever repay you?" + +"By committing no imprudences or foolishnesses, except reasonable ones. +Such as this," added Sauvresy, leaning toward Bertha and embracing her. + +"And there is nothing more to fear?" + +"Nothing! Why I could have borrowed the two millions in an hour, and +they knew it. But that's not all. The search for you is suspended. I +went to your house, took the responsibility of sending away all your +servants except your valet and a groom. If you agree, we'll send the +horses to be sold to-morrow, and they'll fetch a good price; your own +saddle-horse shall be brought here." + +These details annoyed Bertha. She thought her husband exaggerated his +services, carrying them even to servility. + +"Really," thought she, "he was born to be a steward." + +"Do you know what else I did?" pursued Sauvresy. "Thinking that perhaps +you were in want of a wardrobe, I had three or four trunks filled with +your clothes, sent them out by rail, and one of the servants has just +gone after them." + +Hector, too, began to find Sauvresy's services excessive, and thought he +treated him too much like a child who could foresee nothing. The idea of +having it said before a woman that he was in want of clothes irritated +him. He forgot that he had found it a very simple thing in the morning +to ask his friend for some linen. + +Just then a noise was heard in the vestibule. Doubtless the trunks had +come. Bertha went out to give the necessary orders. + +"Quick!" cried Sauvresy. "Now that we are alone, here are your trinkets. +I had some trouble in getting them. They are suspicious at the +pawnbroker's. I think they began to suspect that I was one of a band of +thieves." + +"You didn't mention my name, did you?" + +"That would have been useless. My notary was with me, fortunately. One +never knows how useful one's notary may be. Don't you think society is +unjust toward notaries?" + +Tremorel thought his friend talked very lightly about a serious matter, +and this flippancy vexed him. + +"To finish up, I paid a visit to Miss Jenny. She has been abed since +last evening, and her chambermaid told me she had not ceased sobbing +bitterly ever since your departure." + +"Had she seen no one?" + +"Nobody at all. She really thought you dead, and when I told her you +were here with me, alive and well, I thought she would go mad for joy. +Do you know, Hector, she's really pretty." + +"Yes--not bad." + +"And a very good little body, I imagine. She told me some very touching +things. I would wager, my friend, that she don't care so much for your +money as she does for yourself." + +Hector smiled superciliously. + +"In short, she was anxious to follow me, to see and speak to you. I had +to swear with terrible oaths that she should see you to-morrow, before +she would let me go; not at Paris, as you said you would never go there, +but at Corbeil." + +"Ah, as for that--" + +"She will be at the station to-morrow at twelve. We will go down +together, and I will take the train for Paris. You can get into the +Corbeil train, and breakfast with Miss Jenny at the hotel of the Belle +Image." + +Hector began to offer an objection. Sauvresy stopped him with a gesture. + +"Not a word," said he. "Here is my wife." + + + + +XV + + +On going to bed, that night, the count was less enchanted than ever with +the devotion of his friend Sauvresy. There is not a diamond on which a +spot cannot be found with a microscope. + +"Here he is," thought he, "abusing his privileges as the saver of my +life. Can't a man do you a service, without continually making you feel +it? It seems as though because he prevented me from blowing my brains +out, I had somehow become something that belongs to him! He came very +near upbraiding me for Jenny's extravagance. Where will he stop?" + +The next day at breakfast he feigned indisposition so as not to eat, and +suggested to Sauvresy that he would lose the train. + +Bertha, as on the evening before, crouched at the window to see them go +away. Her troubles during the past eight-and-forty hours had been so +great that she hardly recognized herself. She scarcely dared to reflect +or to descend to the depths of her heart. What mysterious power did this +man possess, to so violently affect her life? She wished that he would +go, never to return, while at the same time she avowed to herself that +in going he would carry with him all her thoughts. She struggled under +the charm, not knowing whether she ought to rejoice or grieve at the +inexpressible emotions which agitated her, being irritated to submit to +an influence stronger than her own will. + +She decided that to-day she would go down to the drawing-room. He would +not fail--were it only for politeness--to go in there; and then, she +thought, by seeing him nearer, talking with him, knowing him better, his +influence over her would vanish. Doubtless he would return, and so she +watched for him, ready to go down as soon as she saw him approaching. +She waited with feverish shudderings, anxiously believing that this +first tete-a-tete in her husband's absence would be decisive. Time +passed; it was more than two hours since he had gone out with Sauvresy, +and he had not reappeared. Where could he be? + +At this moment, Hector was awaiting Jenny at the Corbeil station. The +train arrived, and Jenny soon appeared. Her grief, joy, emotion had not +made her forget her toilet, and never had she been so rollickingly +elegant and pretty. She wore a green dress with a train, a velvet +mantle, and the jauntiest little hat in the world. As soon as she saw +Hector standing near the door, she uttered a cry, pushed the people +aside, and rushed into his arms, laughing and crying at the same time. +She spoke quite loud, with wild gestures, so that everyone could hear +what she said. + +"You didn't kill yourself, after all," said she. "Oh, how I have +suffered; but what happiness I feel to-day!" + +Tremorel struggled with her as he could, trying to calm her enthusiastic +exclamations, softly repelling her, charmed and irritated at once, and +exasperated at all these eyes rudely fixed on him. For none of the +passengers had gone out. They were all there, staring and gazing. Hector +and Jenny were surrounded by a circle of curious folks. + +"Come along," said Hector, his patience exhausted. He drew her out of +the door, hoping to escape this prying curiosity; but he did not +succeed. They were persistently followed. Some of the Corbeil people who +were on the top of the omnibus begged the conductor to walk his horses, +that this singular couple might not be lost to view, and the horses did +not get into a trot until they had disappeared in the hotel. + +Sauvresy's foresight in recommending the place of meeting had thus been +disconcerted by Jenny's sensational arrival. Questions were asked; the +hostess was adroitly interrogated, and it was soon known that this +person, who waited for eccentric young ladies at the Corbeil station, +was an intimate friend of the owner of Valfeuillu. Neither Hector nor +Jenny doubted that they formed the general topic of conversation. They +breakfasted gayly in the best room at the Belle Image, during which +Tremorel recounted a very pretty story about his restoration to life, in +which he played a part, the heroism of which was well calculated to +redouble the little lady's admiration. Then Jenny in her turn unfolded +her plans for the future, which were, to do her justice, most +reasonable. She had resolved more than ever to remain faithful to Hector +now that he was ruined, to give up her elegant rooms, sell her +furniture, and undertake some honest trade. She had found one of her old +friends, who was now an accomplished dressmaker, and who was anxious to +obtain a partner who had some money, while she herself furnished the +experience. They would purchase an establishment in the Breda quarter, +and between them could scarcely fail to prosper. Jenny talked with a +pretty, knowing, business-like air, which made Hector laugh. These +projects seemed very comic to him; yet he was touched by this +unselfishness on the part of a young and pretty woman, who was willing +to work in order to please him. + +But, unhappily, they were forced to part. Jenny had gone to Corbeil +intending to stay a week; but the count told her this was absolutely +impossible. She cried bitterly at first, then got angry, and finally +consoled herself with a plan to return on the following Tuesday. + +"Good-by," said she, embracing Hector, "think of me." She smilingly +added, "I ought to be jealous; for they say your friend's wife is +perhaps the handsomest woman in France. Is it true?" + +"Upon my word, I don't know. I've forgotten to look at her." + +Hector told the truth. Although he did not betray it, he was still under +the surprise of his chagrin at the failure of his attempt at suicide. He +felt the dizziness which follows great moral crises as well as a heavy +blow on the head, and which distracts the attention from exterior +things. But Jenny's words, "the handsomest woman in France," attracted +his notice, and he could, that very evening, repair his forgetfulness. +When he returned to Valfeuillu, his friend had not returned; Mme. +Sauvresy was alone reading, in the brilliantly lighted drawing-room. +Hector seated himself opposite her, a little aside, and was thus able to +observe her at his ease, while engaging her in conversation. His first +impression was an unfavorable one. He found her beauty too sculptural +and polished. He sought for imperfections, and finding none, was almost +terrified by this lovely, motionless face, these clear, cold eyes. +Little by little, however, he accustomed himself to pass the greater +part of the afternoon with Bertha, while Sauvresy was away arranging his +affairs--selling, negotiating, using his time in cutting down interests +and discussing with agents and attorneys. He soon perceived that she +listened to him with pleasure, and he judged from this that she was a +decidedly superior woman, much better than her husband. He had no wit, +but possessed an inexhaustible fund of anecdotes and adventures. He had +seen so many things and known so many people that he was as interesting +as a chronicle. He had a sort of frothy fervor, not wanting in +brilliancy, and a polite cynicism which, at first, surprised one. Had +Bertha been unimpassioned, she might have judged him at his value; but +she had lost her power of insight. She heard him, plunged in a foolish +ecstasy, as one hears a traveller who has returned from far and +dangerous countries, who has visited peoples of whose language the +hearer is ignorant, and lived in the midst of manners and customs +incomprehensible to ourselves. + +Days, weeks, months passed on, and the Count de Tremorel did not find +life at Valfeuillu as dull as he had thought. He insensibly slipped +along the gentle slope of material well-being, which leads directly to +brutishness. A physical and moral torpor had succeeded the fever of the +first days, free from disagreeable sensations, though wanting in +excitement. He ate and drank much, and slept twelve round hours. The +rest of the time, when he did not talk with Bertha, he wandered in the +park, lounged in a rocking-chair, or took a jaunt in the saddle. He even +went fishing under the willows at the foot of the garden; and grew fat. +His best days were those which he spent at Corbeil with Jenny. He found +in her something of his past, and she always quarrelled with him, which +woke him up. Besides, she brought him the gossip of Paris and the small +talk of the boulevards. She came regularly every week, and her love for +Hector, far from diminishing, seemed to grow with each interview. The +poor girl's affairs were in a troubled condition. She had bought her +establishment at too high a price, and her partner at the end of the +first month decamped, carrying off three thousand francs. She knew +nothing about the trade which she had undertaken, and she was robbed +without mercy on all sides. She said nothing of these troubles to +Hector, but she intended to ask him to come to her assistance. It was +the least that he could do. + +At first, the visitors to Valfeuillu were somewhat astonished at the +constant presence there of a young man of leisure; but they got +accustomed to him. Hector assumed a melancholy expression of +countenance, such as a man ought to have who had undergone unheard-of +misfortunes, and whose life had failed of its promise. He appeared +inoffensive; people said: + +"The count has a charming simplicity." + +But sometimes, when alone, he had sudden and terrible relapses. "This +life cannot last," thought he; and he was overcome with childish rage +when he contrasted the past with the present. How could he shake off +this dull existence, and rid himself of these stiffly good people who +surrounded him, these friends of Sauvresy? Where should he take refuge? +He was not tempted to return to Paris; what could he do there? His house +had been sold to an old leather merchant; and he had no money except +that which he borrowed of Sauvresy. Yet Sauvresy, to Hector's mind, was +a most uncomfortable, wearisome, implacable friend; he did not +understand half-way measures in desperate situations. + +"Your boat is foundering," he said to Hector; "let us begin by throwing +all that is superfluous into the sea. Let us keep nothing of the past; +that is dead; we will bury it, and nothing shall recall it. When your +situation is relieved, we will see." + +The settlement of Hector's affairs was very laborious. Creditors sprung +up at every step, on every side, and the list of them seemed never to be +finished. Some had even come from foreign lands. Several of them had +been already paid, but their receipts could not be found, and they were +clamorous. Others, whose demands had been refused as exorbitant, +threatened to go to law, hoping to frighten Sauvresy into paying. +Sauvresy wearied his friend by his incessant activity. Every two or +three days he went to Paris, and he attended the sales of the property +in Burgundy and Orleans. The count at last detested and hated him; +Sauvresy's happy, cheerful air annoyed him; jealousy stung him. One +thought--that a wretched one--consoled him a little. "Sauvresy's +happiness," said he to himself, "is owing to his imbecility. He thinks +his wife dead in love with him, whereas she can't bear him." + +Bertha had, indeed, permitted Hector to perceive her aversion to her +husband. She no longer studied the emotions of her heart; she loved +Tremorel, and confessed it to herself. In her eyes he realized the ideal +of her dreams. At the same time she was exasperated to see in him no +signs of love for her. Her beauty was not, then, irresistible, as she +had often been told. He was gallant and courteous to her--nothing more. + +"If he loved me," thought she, "he would tell me so, for he is bold with +women and fears no one." + +Then she began to hate the girl, her rival, whom Hector went to meet at +Corbeil every week. She wished to see her, to know her. Who could she +be? Was she handsome? Hector had been very reticent about Jenny. He +evaded all questions about her, not sorry to let Bertha's imagination +work on his mysterious visits. + +The day at last came when she could no longer resist the intensity of +her curiosity. She put on the simplest of her toilets, in black, threw a +thick veil over her head, and hastened to the Corbeil station at the +hour that she thought the unknown girl would present herself there. She +took a seat on a bench in the rear of the waiting-room. She had not long +to wait. She soon perceived the count and a young girl coming along the +avenue, which she could see from where she sat. They were arm in arm, +and seemed to be in a very happy mood. They passed within a few steps of +her, and as they walked very slowly, she was able to scrutinize Jenny at +her ease. She saw that she was pretty, but that was all. Having seen +that which she wished, and become satisfied that Jenny was not to be +feared (which showed her inexperience) Bertha directed her steps +homeward. But she chose her time of departure awkwardly; for as she was +passing along behind the cabs, which concealed her, Hector came out of +the station. They crossed each other's paths at the gate, and their eyes +met. Did he recognize her? His face expressed great surprise, yet he did +not bow to her. "Yes, he recognized me," thought Bertha, as she returned +home by the river-road; and surprised, almost terrified by her boldness, +she asked herself whether she ought to rejoice or mourn over this +meeting. What would be its result? Hector cautiously followed her at a +little distance. He was greatly astonished. His vanity, always on the +watch, had already apprised him of what was passing in Bertha's heart, +but, though modesty was no fault of his, he was far from guessing that +she was so much enamoured of him as to take such a step. + +"She loves me!" he repeated to himself, as he went along. "She loves +me!" + +He did not yet know what to do. Should he fly? Should he still appear +the same in his conduct toward her, pretending not to have seen her? He +ought to fly that very evening, without hesitation, without turning his +head; to fly as if the house were about to tumble about his head. This +was his first thought. It was quickly stifled under the explosion of the +base passions which fermented in him. Ah, Sauvresy had saved him when he +was dying! Sauvresy, after saving him, had welcomed him, opened to him +his heart, purse, house; at this very moment he was making untiring +efforts to restore his fortunes. Men like Tremorel can only receive such +services as outrages. Had not his sojourn at Valfeuillu been a continual +suffering? Was not his self-conceit tortured from morning till night? He +might count the days by their humiliations. What! Must he always submit +to--if he was not grateful for--the superiority of a man whom he had +always been wont to treat as his inferior? + +"Besides," thought he, judging his friend by himself, "he only acts thus +from pride and ostentation. What am I at his house, but a living witness +of his generosity and devotion? He seems to live for me--it's Tremorel +here and Tremorel there! He triumphs over my misfortunes, and makes his +conduct a glory and title to the public admiration." + +He could not forgive his friend for being so rich, so happy, so highly +respected, for having known how to regulate his life, while he had +exhausted his own fortune at thirty. And should he not seize so good an +opportunity to avenge himself for the favors which overwhelmed him? + +"Have I run after his wife?" said he to himself, trying to impose +silence on his conscience. "She comes to me of her own will, herself, +without the least temptation from me. I should be a fool if I repelled +her." + +Conceit has irresistible arguments. Hector, when he entered the house, +had made up his mind. He did not fly. Yet he had the excuse neither of +passion nor of temptation; he did not love her, and his infamy was +deliberate, coldly premeditated. Between her and him a chain more solid +than mutual attraction was riveted; their common hatred of Sauvresy. +They owed too much to him. His hand had held both from degradation. + +The first hours of their mutual understanding were spent in angry words, +rather than the cooings of love. They perceived too clearly the disgrace +of their conduct not to try to reassure each other against their +remorse. They tried to prove to each other that Sauvresy was ridiculous +and odious; as if they were absolved by his deficiencies, if +deficiencies he had. If indeed trustfulness is foolishness, Sauvresy was +indeed a fool, because he could be deceived under his own eyes, in his +own house, because he had perfect faith in his wife and his friend. He +suspected nothing, and every day he rejoiced that he had been able to +keep Tremorel by him. He often repeated to his wife: + +"I am too happy." + +Bertha employed all her art to encourage these joyous illusions. She who +had before been so capricious, so nervous, wilful, became little by +little submissive to the degree of an angelic softness. The future of +her love depended on her husband, and she spared no pains to prevent the +slightest suspicion from ruffling his calm confidence. Such was their +prudence that no one in the house suspected their state. And yet Bertha +was not happy. Her love did not yield her the joys she had expected. She +hoped to be transported to the clouds, and she remained on the earth, +hampered by all the miserable ties of a life of lies and deceit. + +Perhaps she perceived that she was Hector's revenge on her husband, and +that he only loved in her the dishonored wife of an envied friend. And +to crown all, she was jealous. For several months she tried to persuade +Tremorel to break with Jenny. He always had the same reply, which, +though it might be prudent, was irritating. + +"Jenny is our security--you must think of that." + +The fact was, however, that he was trying to devise some means of +getting rid of Jenny. It was a difficult matter. The poor girl, having +fallen into comparative poverty, became more and more tenacious of +Hector's affection. She often gave him trouble by telling him that he +was no longer the same, that he was changed; she was sad, and wept, and +had red eyes. + +One evening, in a fit of anger, she menaced him with a singular threat. + +"You love another," she said. "I know it, for I have proofs of it. Take +care! If you ever leave me, my anger will fall on her head, and I will +not have any mercy on her." + +The count foolishly attached no importance to these words; they only +hastened the separation. + +"She is getting very troublesome," thought he. "If some day I shouldn't +go when she was expecting me, she might come up to Valfeuillu, and make +a wretched scandal." + +He armed himself with all his courage, which was assisted by Bertha's +tears and entreaties, and started for Corbeil resolved to break off with +Jenny. He took every precaution in declaring his intentions, giving the +best reasons for his decision that he could think of. + +"We must be careful, you know, Jenny," said he, "and cease to meet for a +while. I am ruined, you know, and the only thing that can save me is +marriage." + +Hector had prepared himself for an explosion of fury, piercing cries, +hysterics, fainting-fits. To his great surprise, Jenny did not answer a +word. She became as white as her collar, her ruddy lips blanched, her +eyes stared. + +"So," said she, with her teeth tightly shut to contain herself, "so you +are going to get married?" + +"Alas, I must," he answered with a hypocritical sigh. "You know that +lately I have only been able to get money for you by borrowing from my +friend; his purse will not be at my service forever." + +Jenny took Hector by the hand, and led him to the window. There, looking +intently at him, as if her gaze could frighten the truth out of him, she +said, slowly: + +"It is really true, is it, that you are going to leave me to get +married?" + +Hector disengaged one of his hands, and placed it on his heart. + +"I swear it on my honor," said he. + +"I ought to believe you, then." + +Jenny returned to the middle of the room. Standing erect before the +mirror, she put on her hat, quietly disposing its ribbons as if nothing +had occurred. When she was ready to go, she went up to Tremorel. "For +the last time," said she, in a tone which she forced to be firm, and +which belied her tearful, glistening eyes. "For the last time, Hector, +are we really to part?" + +"We must." + +Jenny made a gesture which Tremorel did not see; her face had a +malicious expression; her lips parted to utter some sarcastic response; +but she recovered herself almost immediately. + +"I am going, Hector," said she, after a moment's reflection; "If you are +really leaving me to get married, you shall never hear of me again." + +"Why, Jenny, I hope I shall still remain your friend." + +"Well, only if you abandon me for another reason, remember what I tell +you; you will be a dead man, and she, a lost woman." + +She opened the door; he tried to take her hand; she repulsed him. + +"Adieu!" + +Hector ran to the window to assure himself of her departure. She was +ascending the avenue leading to the station. + +"Well, that's over," thought he, with a sigh of relief. "Jenny was a +good girl." + + + + +XVI + + +The count told half a truth when he spoke to Jenny of his marriage. +Sauvresy and he had discussed the subject, and if the matter was not as +ripe as he had represented, there was at least some prospect of such an +event. Sauvresy had proposed it in his anxiety to complete his work of +restoring Hector to fortune and society. + +One evening, about a month before the events just narrated, he had led +Hector into the library, saying: + +"Give me your ear for a quarter of an hour, and don't answer me hastily. +What I am going to propose to you deserves serious reflection." + +"Well, I can be serious when it is necessary." + +"Let's begin with your debts. Their payment is not yet completed, but +enough has been done to enable us to foresee the end. It is certain that +you will have, after all debts are paid, from three to four hundred +thousand francs." + +Hector had never, in his wildest hopes, expected such success. + +"Why, I'm going to be rich," exclaimed he joyously. + +"No, not rich, but quite above want. There is, too, a mode in which you +can regain your lost position." + +"A mode? what?" + +Sauvresy paused a moment, and looked steadily at his friend. + +"You must marry," said he at last. + +This seemed to surprise Hector, but not disagreeably. + +"I, marry? It's easier to give that advice than to follow it." + +"Pardon me--you ought to know that I do not speak rashly. What would you +say to a young girl of good family, pretty, well brought up, so charming +that, excepting my own wife, I know of no one more attractive, and who +would bring with her a dowry of a million?" + +"Ah, my friend, I should say that I adore her! And do you know such an +angel?" + +"Yes, and you too, for the angel is Mademoiselle Laurence Courtois." + +Hector's radiant face overclouded at this name, and he made a +discouraged gesture. + +"Never," said he. "That stiff and obstinate old merchant, Monsieur +Courtois, would never consent to give his daughter to a man who has been +fool enough to waste his fortune." + +Sauvresy shrugged his shoulders. + +"Now, there's what it is to have eyes, and not see. Know that this +Courtois, whom you think so obstinate, is really the most romantic of +men, and an ambitious old fellow to boot. It would seem to him a grand +good speculation to give his daughter to the Count Hector de Tremorel, +cousin of the Duke of Samblemeuse, the relative of the Commarins, even +though you hadn't a sou. What wouldn't he give to have the delicious +pleasure of saying, Monsieur the Count, my son-in-law; or my daughter, +Madame the Countess Hector! And you aren't ruined, you know, you are +going to have an income of twenty thousand francs, and perhaps enough +more to raise your capital to a million." + +Hector was silent. He had thought his life ended, and now, all of a +sudden, a splendid perspective unrolled itself before him. He might then +rid himself of the patronizing protection of his friend; he would be +free, rich, would have a better wife, as he thought, than Bertha; his +house would outshine Sauvresy's. The thought of Bertha crossed his mind, +and it occurred to him that he might thus escape a lover who although +beautiful and loving was proud and bold, and whose domineering temper +began to be burdensome to him. + +"I may say," said he, seriously to his friend, "that I have always +thought Monsieur Courtois an excellent and honorable man, and +Mademoiselle Laurence seems to me so accomplished a young lady, that a +man might be happy in marrying her even without a dowry." + +"So much the better, my dear Hector, so much the better. But you know, +the first thing is to engage Laurence's affections; her father adores +her, and would not, I am sure, give her to a man whom she herself had +not chosen." + +"Don't disturb yourself," answered Hector, with a gesture of triumph, +"she will love me." + +The next day he took occasion to encounter M. Courtois, who invited him +to dinner. The count employed all his practised seductions on Laurence, +which were so brilliant and able that they were well fitted to surprise +and dazzle a young girl. It was not long before the count was the hero +of the mayor's household. Nothing formal had been said, nor any direct +allusion or overture made; yet M. Courtois was sure that Hector would +some day ask his daughter's hand, and that he should freely answer, +"yes;" while he thought it certain that Laurence would not say "no." + +Bertha suspected nothing; she was now very much worried about Jenny, and +saw nothing else. Sauvresy, after spending an evening with the count at +the mayor's, during which Hector had not once quitted the whist-table, +decided to speak to his wife of the proposed marriage, which he thought +would give her an agreeable surprise. At his first words, she grew pale. +Her emotion was so great that, seeing she would betray herself, she +hastily retired to her boudoir. Sauvresy, quietly seated in one of the +bedroom arm-chairs, continued to expatiate on the advantages of such a +marriage--raising his voice, so that Bertha might hear him in the +neighboring room. + +"Do you know," said he, "that our friend has an income of sixty thousand +crowns? We'll find an estate for him near by, and then we shall see him +and his wife every day. They will be very pleasant society for us in the +autumn months. Hector is a fine fellow, and you've often told me how +charming Laurence is." + +Bertha did not reply. This unexpected blow was so terrible that she +could not think clearly, and her brain whirled. + +"You don't say anything," pursued Sauvresy. "Don't you approve of my +project? I thought you'd be enchanted with it." + +She saw that if she were silent any longer, her husband would go in and +find her sunk upon a chair, and would guess all. She made an effort and +said, in a strangled voice, without attaching any sense to her words: + +"Yes, yes; it is a capital idea." + +"How you say that! Do you see any objections?" + +She was trying to find some objection, but could not. + +"I have a little fear of Laurence's future," said she at last. + +"Bah! Why?" + +"I only say what I've heard you say. You told me that Monsieur Tremorel +has been a libertine, a gambler, a prodigal--" + +"All the more reason for trusting him. His past follies guarantee his +future prudence. He has received a lesson which he will not forget. +Besides, he will love his wife." + +"How do you know?" + +"Parbleu, he loves her already." + +"Who told you so?" + +"Himself." + +And Sauvresy began to laugh about Hector's passion, which he said was +becoming quite pastoral. + +"Would you believe," said he, laughing, "that he thinks our worthy +Courtois a man of wit? Ah, what spectacles these lovers look through! He +spends two or three hours every day with the mayor. What do you suppose +he does there?" + +Bertha, by great effort, succeeded in dissembling her grief; she +reappeared with a smiling face. She went and came, apparently calm, +though suffering the bitterest anguish a woman can endure. And she could +not run to Hector, and ask him if it were true! + +For Sauvresy must be deceiving her. Why? She knew not. No matter. She +felt her hatred of him increasing to disgust; for she excused and +pardoned her lover, and she blamed her husband alone. Whose idea was +this marriage? His. Who had awakened Hector's hopes, and encouraged +them? He, always he. While he had been harmless, she had been able to +pardon him for having married her; she had compelled herself to bear +him, to feign a love quite foreign to her heart. But now he became +hateful; should she submit to his interference in a matter which was +life or death to her? + +She did not close her eyes all night; she had one of those horrible +nights in which crimes are conceived. She did not find herself alone +with Hector until after breakfast the next day, in the billiard-hall. + +"Is it true?" she asked. + +The expression of her face was so menacing that he quailed before it. He +stammered: + +"True--what?" + +"Your marriage." + +He was silent at first, asking himself whether he should tell the truth +or equivocate. At last, irritated by Bertha's imperious tone, he +replied: + +"Yes." + +She was thunderstruck at this response. Till then, she had a glimmer of +hope. She thought that he would at least try to reassure her, to deceive +her. There are times when a falsehood is the highest homage. But no--he +avowed it. She was speechless; words failed her. + +Tremorel began to tell her the motives which prompted his conduct. He +could not live forever at Valfeuillu. What could he, with his habits and +tastes, do with a few thousand crowns a year? He was thirty; he must, +now or never, think of the future. M. Courtois would give his daughter a +million, and at his death there would be a great deal more. Should he +let this chance slip? He cared little for Laurence, it was the dowry he +wanted. He took no pains to conceal his meanness; he rather gloried in +it, speaking of the marriage as simply a bargain, in which he gave his +name and title in exchange for riches. Bertha stopped him with a look +full of contempt. + +"Spare yourself," said she. "You love Laurence." + +He would have protested; he really disliked her. + +"Enough," resumed Bertha. "Another woman would have reproached you; I +simply tell you that this marriage shall not be; I do not wish it. +Believe me, give it up frankly, don't force me to act." + +She retired, shutting the door violently; Hector was furious. + +"How she treats me!" said he to himself. "Just as a queen would speak to +a serf. Ah, she don't want me to marry Laurence!" His coolness returned, +and with it serious reflections. If he insisted on marrying, would not +Bertha carry out her threats? Evidently; for he knew well that she was +one of those women who shrink from nothing, whom no consideration could +arrest. He guessed what she would do, from what she had said in a +quarrel with him about Jenny. She had told him, "I will confess +everything to Sauvresy, and we will be the more bound together by shame +than by all the ceremonies of the church." + +This was surely the mode she would adopt to break a marriage which was +so hateful to her; and Tremorel trembled at the idea of Sauvresy knowing +all. + +"What would he do," thought he, "if Bertha told him? He would kill me +off-hand--that's what I would do in his place. Suppose he didn't; I +should have to fight a duel with him, and if I killed him, quit the +country. Whatever would happen, my marriage is irrevocably broken, and +Bertha seems to be on my hands for all time." + +He saw no possible way out of the horrible situation in which he had put +himself. + +"I must wait," thought he. + +And he waited, going secretly to the mayor's, for he really loved +Laurence. He waited, devoured by anxiety, struggling between Sauvresy's +urgency and Bertha's threats. How he detested this woman who held him, +whose will weighed so heavily on him! Nothing could curb her ferocious +obstinacy. She had one fixed idea. He had thought to conciliate her by +dismissing Jenny. It was a mistake. When he said to her: + +"Bertha, I shall never see Jenny again." + +She answered, ironically: + +"Mademoiselle Courtois will be very grateful to you!" + +That evening, while Sauvresy was crossing the court-yard, he saw a +beggar at the gate, making signs to him. + +"What do you want, my good man?" + +The beggar looked around to see that no one was listening. + +"I have brought you a note," said he, rapidly, and in a low tone. "I was +told to give it, only to you, and to ask you to read it when you are +alone." + +He mysteriously slipped a note, carefully sealed, into Sauvresy's hand. + +"It comes from pretty girl," added he, winking. + +Sauvresy, turning his back to the house, opened it and read: + +"SIR--You will do a great favor to a poor and unhappy girl, if you will +come to-morrow to the Belle Image, at Corbeil, where you will be awaited +all day. + +"Your humble servant, "JENNY F---." + +There was also a postscript. + +"Please, sir, don't say a word of this to the Count de Tremorel." + +"Ah ha," thought Sauvresy, "there's some trouble about Hector, that's +bad for the marriage." + +"I was told, sir," said the beggar, "there would be an answer." + +"Say that I will come," answered Sauvresy, throwing him a franc piece. + + + + +XVII + + +The next day was cold and damp. A fog, so thick that one could not +discern objects ten steps off, hung over the earth. Sauvresy, after +breakfast, took his gun and whistled to his dogs. + +"I'm going to take a turn in Mauprevoir wood," said he. + +"A queer idea," remarked Hector, "for you won't see the end of your +gun-barrel in the woods." + +"No matter, if I see some pheasants." + +This was only a pretext, for Sauvresy, on leaving Valfeuillu, took the +direct road to Corbeil, and half an hour later, faithful to his promise, +he entered the Belle Image tavern. + +Jenny was waiting for him in the large room which had always been +reserved for her since she became a regular customer of the house. Her +eyes were red with recent tears; she was very pale, and her marble color +showed that she had not slept. Her breakfast lay untouched on the table +near the fireplace, where a bright fire was burning. When Sauvresy came +in, she rose to meet him, and took him by the hand with a friendly +motion. + +"Thank you for coming," said she. "Ah, you are very good." + +Jenny was only a girl, and Sauvresy detested girls; but her grief was so +sincere and seemed so deep, that he was touched. + +"You are suffering, Madame?" asked he. + +"Oh, yes, very much." + +Her tears choked her, and she concealed her face in her handkerchief. + +"I guessed right," thought Sauvresy. "Hector has deserted her. Now I +must smooth the wound, and yet make future meetings between them +impossible." + +He took the weeping Jenny's hand, and softly pulled away the +handkerchief. + +"Have courage," said he. + +She lifted her tearful eyes to him, and said: + +"You know, then?" + +"I know nothing, for, as you asked me, I have said nothing to Tremorel; +but I can imagine what the trouble is." + +"He will not see me any more," murmured Jenny. "He has deserted me." + +Sauvresy summoned up all his eloquence. The moment to be persuasive and +paternal had come. He drew a chair up to Jenny's, and sat down. + +"Come, my child," pursued he, "be resigned. People are not always young, +you know. A time comes when the voice of reason must be heard. Hector +does not desert you, but he sees the necessity of assuring his future, +and placing his life on a domestic foundation; he feels the need of a +home." + +Jenny stopped crying. Nature took the upper hand, and her tears were +dried by the fire of anger which took possession of her. She rose, +overturning her chair, and walked restlessly up and down the room. + +"Do you believe that?" said she. "Do you believe that Hector troubles +himself about his future? I see you don't know his character. He dream +of a home, or a family? He never has and never will think of anything +but himself. If he had any heart, would he have gone to live with you as +he has? He had two arms to gain his bread and mine. I was ashamed to ask +money of him, knowing that what he gave me came from you." + +"But he is my friend, my dear child." + +"Would you do as he has done?" + +Sauvresy did not know what to say; he was embarrassed by the logic of +this daughter of the people, judging her lover rudely, but justly. + +"Ah, I know him, I do," continued Jenny, growing more excited as her +mind reverted to the past. "He has only deceived me once--the morning he +came and told me he was going to kill himself. I was stupid enough to +think him dead, and to cry about it. He, kill himself? Why, he's too +much of a coward to hurt himself! Yes, I love him, but I don't esteem +him. That's our fate, you see, only to love the men we despise." + +Jenny talked loud, gesticulating, and every now and then thumping the +table with her fist so that the bottles and glasses jingled. Sauvresy +was somewhat fearful lest the hotel people should hear her; they knew +him, and had seen him come in. He began to be sorry that he had come, +and tried to calm the girl. + +"But Hector is not deserting you," repeated he. "He will assure you a +good position." + +"Humph! I should laugh at such a thing! Have I any need of him? As long +as I have ten fingers and good eyes, I shall not be at the mercy of any +man. He made me change my name, and wanted to accustom me to luxury! And +now there is neither a Miss Jenny, nor riches, but there is a Pelagie, +who proposes to get her fifty sous a day, without much trouble." + +"No," said Sauvresy, "you will not need--" + +"What? To work? But I like work; I am not a do-nothing. I will go back +to my old life. I used to breakfast on a sou's worth of biscuit and a +sou's worth of potatoes, and was well and happy. On Sundays, I dined at +the Turk for thirty sous. I laughed more then in one afternoon, than in +all the years I have known Tremorel." + +She no longer cried, nor was she angry; she was laughing. She was +thinking of her old breakfasts, and her feasts at the Turk. + +Sauvresy was stupefied. He had no idea of this Parisian nature, +detestable and excellent, emotional to excess, nervous, full of +transitions, which laughs and cries, caresses and strikes in the same +minute, which a passing idea whirls a hundred leagues from the present +moment. + +"So," said Jenny, more calmly, "I snap my fingers at Hector,"--she had +just said exactly the contrary, and had forgotten it--"I don't care for +him, but I will not let him leave me in this way. It sha'n't be said +that he left me for another. I won't have it." + +Jenny was one of those women who do not reason, but who feel; with whom +it is folly to argue, for their fixed idea is impregnable to the most +victorious arguments. Sauvresy asked himself why she had asked him to +come, and said to himself that the part he had intended to play would be +a difficult one. But he was patient. + +"I see, my child," he commenced, "that you haven't understood or even +heard me. I told you that Hector was intending to marry." + +"He!" answered Jenny, with an ironical gesture. "He get married." + +She reflected a moment, and added: + +"If it were true, though--" + +"I tell you it is so." + +"No," cried Jenny, "no, that can't be possible. He loves another, I am +sure of it, for I have proofs." + +Sauvresy smiled; this irritated her. + +"What does this letter mean," cried she warmly, "which I found in his +pocket, six months ago? It isn't signed to be sure, but it must have +come from a woman." + +"A letter?" + +"Yes, one that destroys all doubts. Perhaps you ask, why I did not speak +to him about it? Ah, you see, I did not dare. I loved him. I was afraid +if I said anything, and it was true he loved another, I should lose him. +And so I resigned myself to humiliation, I concealed myself to weep, for +I said to myself, he will come back to me. Poor fool!" + +"Well, but what will you do?" + +"Me? I don't know--anything. I didn't say anything about the letter, but +I kept it; it is my weapon--I will make use of it. When I want to, I +shall find out who she is, and then--" + +"You will compel Tremorel, who is kindly disposed toward you, to use +violence." + +"He? What can he do to me? Why, I will follow him like his shadow--I +will cry out everywhere the name of this other. Will he have me put in +St. Lazare prison? I will invent the most dreadful calumnies against +him. They will not believe me at first; later, part of it will be +believed. I have nothing to fear--I have no parents, no friends, nobody +on earth who cares for me. That's what it is to raise girls from the +gutter. I have fallen so low that I defy him to push me lower. So, if +you are his friend, sir, advise him to come back to me." + +Sauvresy was really alarmed; he saw clearly how real and earnest Jenny's +menaces were. There are persecutions against which the law is powerless. +But he dissimulated his alarm under the blandest air he could assume. + +"Hear me, my child," said he. "If I give you my word of honor to tell +you the truth, you'll believe me, won't you?" + +She hesitated a moment, and said: + +"Yes, you are honorable; I will believe you." + +"Then, I swear to you that Tremorel hopes to marry a young girl who is +immensely rich, whose dowry will secure his future." + +"He tells you so; he wants you to believe it." + +"Why should he? Since he came to Valfeuillu, he could have had no other +affair than this with you. He lives in my house, as if he were my +brother, between my wife and myself, and I could tell you how he spends +his time every hour of every day as well as what I do myself." + +Jenny opened her mouth to reply, but a sudden reflection froze the words +on her lips. She remained silent and blushed violently, looking at +Sauvresy with an indefinable expression. He did not observe this, being +inspired by a restless though aimless curiosity. This proof, which Jenny +talked about, worried him. + +"Suppose," said he, "you should show me this letter." + +She seemed to feel at these words an electric shock. + +"To you?" she said, shuddering. "Never!" + +If, when one is sleeping, the thunder rolls and the storm bursts, it +often happens that the sleep is not troubled; then suddenly, at a +certain moment, the imperceptible flutter of a passing insect's wing +awakens one. + +Jenny's shudder was like such a fluttering to Sauvresy. The sinister +light of doubt struck on his soul. Now his confidence, his happiness, +his repose, were gone forever. He rose with a flashing eye and trembling +lips. + +"Give me the letter," said he, in an imperious tone. Jenny recoiled with +terror. She tried to conceal her agitation, to smile, to turn the matter +into a joke. + +"Not to-day," said she. "Another time; you are too curious." + +But Sauvresy's anger was terrible; he became as purple as if he had had +a stroke of apoplexy, and he repeated, in a choking voice: + +"The letter, I demand the letter." + +"Impossible," said Jenny. "Because," she added, struck with an idea, "I +haven't got it here." + +"Where is it?" + +"At my room, in Paris." + +"Come, then, let us go there." + +She saw that she was caught; and she could find no more excuses, +quick-witted as she was. She might, however, easily have followed +Sauvresy, put his suspicions to sleep with her gayety, and when once in +the Paris streets, might have eluded him and fled. But she did not think +of that. It occurred to her that she might have time to reach the door, +open it, and rush downstairs. She started to do so. Sauvresy caught her +at a bound, shut the door, and said, in a low, hoarse voice: + +"Wretched girl! Do you wish me to strike you?" + +He pushed her into a chair, returned to the door, double locked it, and +put the keys in his pocket. "Now," said he, returning to the girl, "the +letter." + +Jenny had never been so terrified in her life. This man's rage made her +tremble; she saw that he was beside himself, that she was completely at +his mercy; yet she still resisted him. + +"You have hurt me very much," said she, crying, "but I have done you no +harm." + +He grasped her hands in his, and bending over her, repeated: + +"For the last time, the letter; give it to me, or I will take it by +force." + +It would have been folly to resist longer. "Leave me alone," said she. +"You shall have it." + +He released her, remaining, however, close by her side, while she +searched in all her pockets. Her hair had been loosened in the struggle, +her collar was torn, she was tired, her teeth chattered, but her eyes +shone with a bold resolution. + +"Wait--here it is--no. It's odd--I am sure I've got it though--I had it +a minute ago--" + +And, suddenly, with a rapid gesture, she put the letter, rolled into a +ball, into her mouth, and tried to swallow it. But Sauvresy as quickly +grasped her by the throat, and she was forced to disgorge it. + +He had the letter at last. His hands trembled so that he could scarcely +open it. + +It was, indeed, Bertha's writing. + +Sauvresy tottered with a horrible sensation of dizziness; he could not +see clearly; there was a red cloud before his eyes; his legs gave way +under him, he staggered, and his hands stretched out for a support. +Jenny, somewhat recovered, hastened to give him help; but her touch made +him shudder, and he repulsed her. What had happened he could not tell. +Ah, he wished to read this letter and could not. He went to the table, +turned out and drank two large glasses of water one after another. The +cold draught restored him, his blood resumed its natural course, and he +could see. The note was short, and this was what he read: + +"Don't go to-morrow to Petit-Bourg; or rather, return before breakfast. +He has just told me that he must go to Melun, and that he should return +late. A whole day!" + +"He"--that was himself. This other lover of Hector's was Bertha, his +wife. For a moment he saw nothing but that; all thought was crushed +within him. His temples beat furiously, he heard a dreadful buzzing in +his ears, it seemed to him as if the earth were about to swallow him up. +He fell into a chair; from purple he became ashy white. Great tears +trickled down his cheeks. + +Jenny understood the miserable meanness of her conduct when she saw this +great grief, this silent despair, this man with a broken heart. Was she +not the cause of all? She had guessed who the writer of the note was. +She thought when she asked Sauvresy to come to her, that she could tell +him all, and thus avenge herself at once upon Hector and her rival. +Then, on seeing this man refusing to comprehend her hints, she had been +full of pity for him. She had said to herself that he would be the one +who would be most cruelly punished; and then she had recoiled--but too +late--and he had snatched the secret from her. + +She approached Sauvresy and tried to take his hands; he still repulsed +her. + +"Let me alone," said he. + +"Pardon me, sir--I am a wretch, I am horrified at myself." + +He rose suddenly; he was gradually coming to himself. + +"What do you want?" + +"That letter--I guessed--" + +He burst into a loud, bitter, discordant laugh, and replied: + +"God forgive me! Why, my dear, did you dare to suspect my wife?" + +While Jenny was muttering confused excuses, he drew out his pocket-book +and took from it all the money it contained--some seven or eight hundred +francs--which he put on the table. + +"Take this, from Hector," said he, "he will not permit you to suffer for +anything; but, believe me, you had best let him get married." + +Then he mechanically took up his gun, opened the door, and went out. His +dogs leaped upon him to caress him; he kicked them off. Where was he +going? What was he going to do? + + + + +XVIII + + +A small, fine, chilly rain had succeeded the morning fog; but Sauvresy +did not perceive it. He went across the fields with his head bare, +wandering at hazard, without aim or discretion. He talked aloud as he +went, stopping ever and anon, then resuming his course. The peasants who +met him--they all knew him--turned to look at him after having saluted +him, asking themselves whether the master of Valfeuillu had not gone +mad. Unhappily he was not mad. Overwhelmed by an unheard-of, +unlooked-for catastrophe, his brain had been for a moment paralyzed. But +one by one he collected his scattered ideas and acquired the faculty of +thinking and of suffering. Each one of his reflections increased his +mortal anguish. Yes, Bertha and Hector had deceived, had dishonored him. +She, beloved to idolatry; he, his best and oldest friend, a wretch that +he had snatched from misery, who owed him everything. And it was in his +house, under his own roof, that this infamy had taken place. They had +taken advantage of his noble trust, had made a dupe of him. The +frightful discovery not only embittered the future, but also the past. +He longed to blot out of his life these years passed with Bertha, with +whom, but the night before, he had recalled these "happiest years of his +life." The memory of his former happiness filled his soul with disgust. +But how had this been done? When? How was it he had seen nothing of it? +And now things came into his mind which should have warned him had he +not been blind. He recalled certain looks of Bertha, certain tones of +voice, which were an avowal. At times, he tried to doubt. There are +misfortunes so great that to be believed there must be more than +evidence. + +"It is not possible!" muttered he. + +Seating himself upon a prostrate tree in the midst of Mauprevoir forest, +he studied the fatal letter for the tenth time within four hours. + +"It proves all," said he, "and it proves nothing." + +And he read once more. + +"Do not go to-morrow to Petit-Bourg--" + +Well, had he not again and again, in his idiotic confidence, said to +Hector: + +"I shall be away to-morrow, stay here and keep Bertha company." + +This sentence, then, had no positive signification. But why add: + +"Or rather, return before breakfast." + +This was what betrayed fear, that is, the fault. To go away and return +again anon, was to be cautious, to avoid suspicion. Then, why "he," +instead of, "Clement?" This word was striking. "He"--that is, the dear +one, or else, the master that one hates. There is no medium--'tis the +husband, or the lover. "He," is never an indifferent person. A husband +is lost when his wife, in speaking of him, says, "He." + +But when had Bertha written these few lines? Doubtless some evening +after they had retired to their room. He had said to her, "I'm going +to-morrow to Melun," and then she had hastily scratched off this note +and given it, in a book, to Hector. + +Alas! the edifice of his happiness, which had seemed to him strong +enough to defy every tempest of life, had crumbled, and he stood there +lost in the midst of its debris. No more happiness, joys, +hopes--nothing! All his plans for the future rested on Bertha; her name +was mingled in his every dream, she was at once the future and the +dream. He had so loved her that she had become something of himself, +that he could not imagine himself without her. Bertha lost to him, he +saw no direction in life to take, he had no further reason for living. +He perceived this so vividly that the idea of suicide came to him. He +had his gun, powder and balls; his death would be attributed to a +hunting accident, and all would be over. + +Oh, but the guilty ones! + +They would doubtless go on in their infamous comedy--would seem to mourn +for him, while really their hearts would bound with joy. No more +husband, no more hypocrisies or terrors. His will giving his fortune to +Bertha, they would be rich. They would sell everything, and would depart +rejoicing to some distant clime. As to his memory, poor man, it would +amuse them to think of him as the cheated and despised husband. + +"Never!" cried he, drunk with fury, "never! I must kill myself, but +first, I must avenge my dishonor!" + +But he tried in vain to imagine a punishment cruel or terrible enough. +What chastisement could expiate the horrible tortures which he endured? +He said to himself that, in order to assure his vengeance, he must +wait--and he swore that he would wait. He would feign the same stolid +confidence, and resigned himself to see and hear everything. + +"My hypocrisy will equal theirs," thought he. + +Indeed a cautious duplicity was necessary. Bertha was most cunning, and +at the first suspicion would fly with her lover. Hector had +already--thanks to him--several hundred thousand francs. The idea that +they might escape his vengeance gave him energy and a clear head. + +It was only then that he thought of the flight of time, the rain falling +in torrents, and the state of his clothes. + +"Bah!" thought he, "I will make up some story to account for myself." + +He was only a league from Valfeuillu, but he was an hour and a half +reaching home. He was broken, exhausted; he felt chilled to the marrow +of his bones. But when he entered the gate, he had succeeded in assuming +his usual expression, and the gayety which so well hinted his perfect +trustfulness. He had been waited for, but in spite of his resolutions, +he could not sit at table between this man and woman, his two most cruel +enemies. He said that he had taken cold, and would go to bed. Bertha +insisted in vain that he should take at least a bowl of broth and a +glass of claret. + +"Really," said he, "I don't feel well." + +When he had retired, Bertha said: + +"Did you notice, Hector?" + +"What?" + +"Something unusual has happened to him." + +"Very likely, after being all day in the rain." + +"No. His eye had a look I never saw before." + +"He seemed to be very cheerful, as he always is." + +"Hector, my husband suspects!" + +"He? Ah, my poor good friend has too much confidence in us to think of +being jealous." + +"You deceive yourself, Hector; he did not embrace me when he came in, +and it is the first time since our marriage." + +Thus, at the very first, he had made a blunder. He knew it well; but it +was beyond his power to embrace Bertha at that moment; and he was +suffering more than he thought he should. When his wife and his friend +ascended to his room, after dinner, they found him shivering under the +sheets, red, his forehead burning, his throat dry, and his eyes shining +with an unusual brilliancy. A fever soon came on, attended by delirium. +A doctor was called, who at first said he would not answer for him. The +next day he was worse. From this time both Hector and Bertha conceived +for him the most tender devotion. Did they think they should thus in +some sort expiate their crime? It is doubtful. More likely they tried to +impose on the people about them; everyone was anxious for Sauvresy. They +never deserted him for a moment, passing the night by turns near his +bed. And it was painful to watch over him; a furious delirium never left +him. Several times force had to be used to keep him on the bed; he tried +to throw himself out of the window. The third day he had a strange +fancy; he did not wish to stay in his chamber. He kept crying out: + +"Carry me away from here, carry me away from here." + +The doctor advised that he should be humored; so a bed was made up for +him in a little room on the ground-floor, overlooking the garden. His +wanderings did not betray anything of his suspicions; perhaps the firm +will was able even to control the delirium. The fever finally yielded on +the ninth day. His breathing became calmer, and he slept. When he awoke, +reason had returned. That was a frightful moment. He had, so to speak, +to take up the burden of his misery. At first he thought it the memory +of a horrid night-mare; but no. He had not dreamed. He recalled the +Belle Image, Jenny, the forest, the letter. What had become of the +letter? Then, having the vague impression of a serious illness, he asked +himself if he had said anything to betray the source of his misery. This +anxiety prevented his making the slightest movement, and he opened his +eyes softly and cautiously. It was eleven at night, and all the servants +had gone to bed. Hector and Bertha alone were keeping watch; he was +reading a paper, she was crocheting. Sauvresy saw by their placid +countenances that he had betrayed nothing. He moved slightly; Bertha at +once arose and came to him. + +"How are you, dear Clement?" asked she, kissing him fondly on the +forehead. + +"I am no longer in pain." + +"You see the result of being careless." + +"How many days have I been sick?" + +"Eight days." + +"Why was I brought here?" + +"Because you wished it." + +Tremorel had approached the bedside. + +"You refused to stay upstairs," said he, "you were ungovernable till we +had you brought here." + +"But don't tire yourself," resumed Hector. "Go to sleep again, and you +will be well by to-morrow. And good-night, for I am going to bed now, +and shall return and wake your wife at four o'clock." + +He went out, and Bertha, having given Sauvresy something to drink, +returned to her seat. + +"What a friend Tremorel is," murmured she. Sauvresy did not answer this +terribly ironical exclamation. He shut his eyes, pretended to sleep, and +thought of the letter. What had he done with it? He remembered that he +had carefully folded it and put it in the right-hand pocket of his vest. +He must have this letter. It would balk his vengeance, should it fall +into his wife's hands; and this might happen at any moment. It was a +miracle that his valet had not put it on the mantel, as he was +accustomed to do with the things which he found in his master's pockets. +He was reflecting on some means of getting it, of the possibility of +going up to his bedroom, where his vest ought to be, when Bertha got up +softly. She came to the bed and whispered gently: + +"Clement, Clement!" + +He did not open his eyes, and she, persuaded that he was sleeping, +though very lightly, stole out of the room, holding her breath as she +went. + +"Oh, the wretch!" muttered Sauvresy, "she is going to him!" + +At the same time the necessity of recovering the letter occurred to him +more vividly than ever. + +"I can get to my room," thought he, "without being seen, by the garden +and back-stairs. She thinks I'm asleep; I shall get back and abed before +she returns." + +Then, without asking himself whether he were not too feeble, or what +danger there might be in exposing himself to the cold, he got up, threw +a gown around him, put on his slippers and went toward the door. + +"If anyone sees me, I will feign delirium," said he to himself. + +The vestibule lamp was out and he found some difficulty in opening the +door; finally, he descended into the garden. It was intensely cold, and +snow had fallen. The wind shook the limbs of the trees crusted with ice. +The front of the house was sombre. One window only was lighted--that of +Tremorel's room; that was lighted brilliantly, by a lamp and a great +blazing fire. The shadow of a man--of Hector--rested on the muslin +curtains; the shape was distinct. He was near the window, and his +forehead was pressed against the panes. Sauvresy instinctively stopped +to look at his friend, who was so at home in his house, and who, in +exchange for the most brotherly hospitality, had brought dishonor, +despair and death. + +Hector made a sudden movement, and turned around as if he was surprised +by an unwonted noise. What was it? Sauvresy only knew too well. Another +shadow appeared on the curtain--that of Bertha. And he had forced +himself to doubt till now! Now proofs had come without his seeking. What +had brought her to that room, at that hour? She seemed to be talking +excitedly. He thought he could hear that full, sonorous voice, now as +clear as metal, now soft and caressing, which had made all the chords of +passion vibrate in him. He once more saw those beautiful eyes which had +reigned so despotically over his heart, and whose expressions he knew so +well. But what was she doing? Doubtless she had gone to ask Hector +something, which he refused her, and she was pleading with him; Sauvresy +saw that she was supplicating, by her motions; he knew the gesture well. +She lifted her clasped hands as high as her forehead, bent her head, +half shut her eyes. What languor had been in her voice when she used to +say: + +"Say, dear Clement, you will, will you not?" + +And now she was using the same blandishments on another. Sauvresy was +obliged to support himself against a tree. Hector was evidently refusing +what she wished; then she shook her finger menacingly, and tossed her +head angrily, as if she were saying: + +"You won't? You shall see, then." + +And then she returned to her supplications. + +"Ah," thought Sauvresy, "he can resist her prayers; I never had such +courage. He can preserve his coolness, his will, when she looks at him; +I never said no to her; rather, I never waited for her to ask anything +of me; I have passed my life in watching her lightest fancies, to +gratify them. Perhaps that is what has ruined me!" + +Hector was obstinate, and Bertha was roused little by little; she must +be angry. She recoiled, holding out her arms, her head thrown back; she +was threatening him. At last he was conquered; he nodded, "Yes." Then +she flung herself upon him, and the two shadows were confounded in a +long embrace. + +Sauvresy could not repress an agonized cry, which was lost amid the +noises of the night. He had asked for certainty; here it was. The truth, +indisputable, evident, was clear to him. He had to seek for nothing +more, now, except for the means to punish surely and terribly. Bertha +and Hector were talking amicably. Sauvresy saw that she was about to go +downstairs, and that he could not now go for the letter. He went in +hurriedly, forgetting, in his fear of being discovered, to lock the +garden door. He did not perceive that he had been standing with naked +feet in the snow, till he had returned to his bedroom again; he saw some +flakes on his slippers, and they were damp; quickly he threw them under +the bed, and jumped in between the clothes, and pretended to be asleep. + +It was time, for Bertha soon came in. She went to the bed, and thinking +that he had not woke up, returned to her embroidery by the fire. +Tremorel also soon reappeared; he had forgotten to take his paper, and +had come back for it. He seemed uneasy. + +"Have you been out to-night, Madame?" asked he, in a low voice. + +"No." + +"Have all the servants gone to bed?" + +"I suppose so; but why do you ask?" + +"Since I have been upstairs, somebody has gone out into the garden, and +come back again." + +Bertha looked at him with a troubled glance. + +"Are you sure of what you say?" + +"Certainly. Snow is falling, and whoever went out brought some back on +his shoes. This has melted in the vestibule--" + +Mme. Sauvresy seized the lamp, and interrupting Hector, said: + +"Come." + +Tremorel was right. Here and there on the vestibule pavement were little +puddles. + +"Perhaps this water has been here some time," suggested Bertha. + +"No. It was not there an hour ago, I could swear. Besides, see, here is +a little snow that has not melted yet." + +"It must have been one of the servants." + +Hector went to the door and examined it. + +"I do not think so," said he. "A servant would have shut the bolts; here +they are, drawn back. Yet I myself shut the door to-night, and +distinctly recollect fastening the bolts." + +"It's very strange!" + +"And all the more so, look you, because the traces of the water do not +go much beyond the drawing-room door." + +They remained silent, and exchanged anxious looks. The same terrible +thought occurred to them both. + +"If it were he?" + +But why should he have gone into the garden? It could not have been to +spy on them. + +They did not think of the window. + +"It couldn't have been Clement," said Bertha, at last. "He was asleep +when I went back, and he is in a calm and deep slumber now." + +Sauvresy, stretched upon his bed, heard what his enemies were saying. He +cursed his imprudence. + +"Suppose," thought he, "they should think of looking at my gown and +slippers!" + +Happily this simple idea did not occur to them; after reassuring each +other as well as they were able, they separated; but each heart carried +an anxious doubt. Sauvresy on that night had a terrible crisis in his +illness. Delirium, succeeding this ray of reason, renewed its possession +of his brain. The next morning Dr. R--- pronounced him in more danger +than ever; and sent a despatch to Paris, saying that he would be +detained at Valfeuillu three or four days. The distemper redoubled in +violence; very contradictory symptoms appeared. Each day brought some +new phase of it, which confounded the foresight of the doctors. Every +time that Sauvresy had a moment of reason, the scene at the window +recurred to him, and drove him to madness again. + +On that terrible night when he had gone out into the snow, he had not +been mistaken; Bertha was really begging something of Hector. This was +it: + +M. Courtois, the mayor, had invited Hector to accompany himself and his +family on an excursion to Fontainebleau on the following day. Hector had +cordially accepted the invitation. Bertha could not bear the idea of his +spending the day in Laurence's company, and begged him not to go. She +told him there were plenty of excuses to relieve him from his promise; +for instance, he might urge that it would not be seemly for him to go +when his friend lay dangerously ill. At first he positively refused to +grant her prayer, but by her supplications and menaces she persuaded +him, and she did not go downstairs until he had sworn that he would +write to M. Courtois that very evening declining the invitation. He kept +his word, but he was disgusted by her tyrannical behavior. He was tired +of forever sacrificing his wishes and his liberty, so that he could plan +nothing, say or promise nothing without consulting this jealous woman, +who would scarcely let him wander out of her sight. The chain became +heavier and heavier to bear, and he began to see that sooner or later it +must be wrenched apart. He had never loved either Bertha or Jenny, or +anyone, probably; but he now loved the mayor's daughter. Her dowry of a +million had at first dazzled him, but little by little he had been +subdued by Laurence's charms of mind and person. He, the dissipated +rake, was seduced by such grave and naive innocence, such frankness and +beauty; he would have married Laurence had she been poor--as Sauvresy +married Bertha. But he feared Bertha too much to brave her suddenly, and +so he waited. The next day after the quarrel about Fontainebleau, he +declared that he was indisposed, attributed it to the want of exercise, +and took to the saddle for several hours every day afterward. But he did +not go far; only to the mayor's. Bertha at first did not perceive +anything suspicious in Tremorel's rides; it reassured her to see him go +off on his horse. After some days, however, she thought she saw in him a +certain feeling of satisfaction concealed under the semblance of +fatigue. She began to have doubts, and these increased every time he +went out; all sorts of conjectures worried her while he was away. Where +did he go? Probably to see Laurence, whom she feared and detested. The +suspicion soon became a certainty with her. One evening Hector appeared, +carrying in his button-hole a flower which Laurence herself had put +there, and which he had forgotten to take out. Bertha took it gently, +examined it, smelt it, and, compelling herself to smile: + +"Why," said she, "what a pretty flower!" + +"So I thought," answered Hector, carelessly, "though I don't know what +it is called." + +"Would it be bold to ask who gave it to you?" + +"Not at all. It's a present from our good Plantat." + +All Orcival knew that M. Plantat, a monomaniac on flowers, never gave +them away to anyone except Mme. Laurence. Hector's evasion was an +unhappy one, and Bertha was not deceived. + +"You promised me, Hector," said she, "not to see Laurence any more, and +to give up this marriage." + +He tried to reply. + +"Let me speak," she continued, "and explain yourself afterward. You have +broken your word--you are deceiving my confidence! But I tell you, you +shall not marry her!" Then, without awaiting his reply, she overwhelmed +him with reproaches. Why had he come here at all? She was happy in her +home before she knew him. She did not love Sauvresy, it was true; but +she esteemed him, and he was good to her. Ignorant of the happiness of +true love, she did not desire it. But he had come, and she could not +resist his fascination. And now, after having engaged her affection, he +was going to desert her, to marry another! Tremorel listened to her, +perfectly amazed at her audacity. What! She dared to pretend that it was +he who had abused her innocence, when, on the contrary, he had sometimes +been astonished at her persistency! Such was the depth of her +corruption, as it seemed to him, that he wondered whether he were her +first or her twentieth lover. And she had so led him on, and had so +forcibly made him feel the intensity of her will, that he had been fain +still to submit to this despotism. But he had now determined to resist +on the first opportunity; and he resisted. + +"Well, yes," said he, frankly, "I did deceive you; I have no +fortune--this marriage will give me one; I shall get married." He went +on to say that he loved Laurence less than ever, but that he coveted her +money more and more every day. "To prove this," he pursued, "if you will +find me to-morrow a girl who has twelve hundred thousand francs instead +of a million, I will marry her in preference to Mademoiselle Courtois." + +She had never suspected he had so much courage. She had so long moulded +him like soft wax, and this unexpected conduct disconcerted her. She was +indignant, but at the same time she felt that unhealthy satisfaction +that some women feel, when they meet a master who subdues them; and she +admired Tremorel more than ever before. This time, he had taken a tone +which conquered her; she despised him enough to think him quite capable +of marrying for money. When he had done, she said: + +"It's really so, then; you only care for the million of dowry?" + +"I've sworn it to you a hundred times." + +"Truly now, don't you love Laurence?" + +"I have never loved her, and never shall." He thought that he would thus +secure his peace until the wedding-day; once married, he cared not what +would happen. What cared he for Sauvresy? Life is only a succession of +broken friendships. What is a friend, after all? One who can and ought +to serve you. Ability consists in breaking with people, when they cease +to be useful to you. + +Bertha reflected. + +"Hear me, Hector," said she at last. "I cannot calmly resign myself to +the sacrifice which you demand. Let me have but a few days, to accustom +myself to this dreadful blow. You owe me as much--let Clement get well, +first." + +He did not expect to see her so gentle and subdued; who would have +looked for such concessions, so easily obtained? The idea of a snare did +not occur to him. In his delight he betrayed how he rejoiced in his +liberty, which ought to have undeceived Bertha; but she did not perceive +it. He grasped her hand, and cried: + +"Ah, you are very good--you really love me." + + + + +XIX + + +The Count de Tremorel did not anticipate that the respite which Bertha +begged would last long. Sauvresy had seemed better during the last week. +He got up every day, and commenced to go about the house; he even +received numerous visits from the neighbors; without apparent fatigue. +But alas, the master of Valfeuillu was only the shadow of himself. His +friends would never have recognized in that emaciated form and white +face, and burning, haggard eye, the robust young man with red lips and +beaming visage whom they remembered. He had suffered so! He did not wish +to die before avenging himself on the wretches who had filched his +happiness and his life. But what punishment should he inflict? This +fixed idea burning in his brain, gave his look a fiery eagerness. +Ordinarily, there are three modes in which a betrayed husband may avenge +himself. He has the right, and it is almost a duty--to deliver the +guilty ones up to the law, which is on his side. He may adroitly watch +them, surprise them and kill them. There is a law which does not +absolve, but excuses him, in this. Lastly, he may affect a stolid +indifference, laugh the first and loudest at his misfortune, drive his +wife from his roof, and leave her to starve. But what poor, wretched +methods of vengeance. Give up his wife to the law? Would not that be to +offer his name, honor, and life to public ridicule? To put himself at +the mercy of a lawyer, who would drag him through the mire. They do not +defend the erring wife, they attack her husband. And what satisfaction +would he get? Bertha and Tremorel would be condemned to a year's +imprisonment, perhaps eighteen months, possibly two years. It seemed to +him simpler to kill them. He might go in, fire a revolver at them, and +they would not have time to comprehend it, for their agony would be but +for a moment; and then? Then, he must become a prisoner, submit to a +trial, invoke the judge's mercy, and risk conviction. As to turning his +wife out of doors, that was to hand her over quietly to Hector. He +imagined them leaving Valfeuillu, hand in hand, happy and smiling, and +laughing in his face. At this thought he had a fit of cold rage; his +self-esteem adding the sharpest pains to the wounds in his heart. None +of these vulgar methods could satisfy him. He longed for some revenge +unheard-of, strange, monstrous, as his tortures were. Then he thought of +all the horrible tales he had read, seeking one to his purpose; he had a +right to be particular, and he was determined to wait until he was +satisfied. There was only one thing that could balk his +progress--Jenny's letter. What had become of it? Had he lost it in the +woods? He had looked for it everywhere, and could not find it. + +He accustomed himself, however, to feign, finding a sort of fierce +pleasure in the constraint. He learned to assume a countenance which +completely hid his thoughts. He submitted to his wife's caresses without +an apparent shudder; and shook Hector by the hand as heartily as ever. +In the evening, when they were gathered about the drawing-room table, he +was the gayest of the three. He built a hundred air-castles, pictured a +hundred pleasure-parties, when he was able to go abroad again. Hector +rejoiced at his returning health. + +"Clement is getting on finely," said he to Bertha, one evening. + +She understood only too well what he meant. + +"Always thinking of Laurence?" + +"Did you not permit me to hope?" + +"I asked you to wait, Hector, and you have done well not to be in a +hurry. I know a young girl who would bring you, not one, but three +millions as dowry." + +This was a painful surprise. He really had no thoughts for anyone but +Laurence, and now a new obstacle presented itself. + +"And who is that?" + +She leaned over, and whispered tremblingly in his ear: + +"I am Clement's sole heiress; perhaps he'll die; I might be a widow +to-morrow." + +Hector was petrified. + +"But Sauvresy, thank God! is getting well fast." + +Bertha fixed her large, clear eyes upon him, and with frightful calmness +said: + +"What do you know about it?" + +Tremorel dared not ask what these strange words meant. He was one of +those men who shun explanations, and who, rather than put themselves on +their guard in time, permit themselves to be drawn on by circumstances; +soft and feeble beings, who deliberately bandage their eyes so as not to +see the danger which threatens them, and who prefer the sloth of doubt, +and acts of uncertainty to a definite and open position, which they have +not the courage to face. + +Besides, Hector experienced a childish satisfaction in seeing Bertha's +distress, though he feared and detested her. He conceived a great +opinion of his own value and merit, when he saw the persistency and +desperation with which she insisted on keeping her hold on him. + +"Poor woman!" thought he. "In her grief at losing me, and seeing me +another's, she has begun to wish for her husband's death!" + +Such was the torpor of his moral sense that he did not see the vileness +of Bertha's and his own thoughts. + +Meanwhile Sauvresy's state was not reassuring for Hector's hopes and +plans. On the very day when he had this conversation with Bertha, her +husband was forced to take to his bed again. This relapse took place +after he had drank a glass of quinine and water, which he had been +accustomed to take just before supper; only, this time, the symptoms +changed entirely, as if one malady had yielded to another of a very +different kind. He complained of a pricking in his skin, of vertigo, of +convulsive twitches which contracted and twisted his limbs, especially +his arms. He cried out with excruciating neuralgic pains in the face. He +was seized with a violent, persistent, tenacious craving for pepper, +which nothing could assuage. He was sleepless, and morphine in large +doses failed to bring him slumber; while he felt an intense chill within +him, as if the body's temperature were gradually diminishing. Delirium +had completely disappeared, and the sick man retained perfectly the +clearness of his mind. Sauvresy bore up wonderfully under his pains, and +seemed to take a new interest in the business of his estates. He was +constantly in consultation with bailiffs and agents, and shut himself up +for days together with notaries and attorneys. Then, saying that he must +have distractions, he received all his friends, and when no one called, +he sent for some acquaintance to come and chat with him in order to +forget his illness. He gave no hint of what he was doing and thinking, +and Bertha was devoured by anxiety. She often watched for her husband's +agent, when, after a conference of several hours, he came out of his +room; and making herself as sweet and fascinating as possible, she used +all her cunning to find out something which would enlighten her as to +what he was about. But no one could, or at least would, satisfy her +curiosity; all gave evasive replies, as if Sauvresy had cautioned them, +or as if there were nothing to tell. + +No complaints were heard from Sauvresy. He talked constantly of Bertha +and Hector; he wished all the world to know their devotion to him; he +called them his "guardian angels," and blessed Heaven that had given him +such a wife and such a friend. Sauvresy's illness now became so serious +that Tremorel began to despair; he became alarmed; what position would +his friend's death leave him in? Bertha, having become a widow, would be +implacable. He resolved to find out her inmost thoughts at the first +opportunity; she anticipated him, and saved him the trouble of broaching +the subject. One afternoon, when they were alone, M. Plantat being in +attendance at the sick man's bedside, Bertha commenced. + +"I want some advice, Hector, and you alone can give it to me. How can I +find out whether Clement, within the past day or two, has not changed +his will in regard to me?" + +"His will?" + +"Yes, I've already told you that by a will of which I myself have a +copy, Sauvresy has left me his whole fortune. I fear that he may perhaps +revoke it." + +"What an idea!" + +"Ah, I have reasons for my apprehensions. What are all these agents and +attorneys doing at Valfeuillu? A stroke of this man's pen may ruin me. +Don't you see that he can deprive me of his millions, and reduce me to +my dowry of fifty thousand francs?" + +"But he will not do it; he loves you--" + +"Are you sure of it? I've told you, there are three millions; I must +have this fortune--not for myself, but for you; I want it, I must have +it! But how can I find out--how? how?" + +Hector was very indignant. It was to this end, then, that his delays had +conducted him! She thought that she had a right now to dispose of him in +spite of himself, and, as it were, to purchase him. And he could not, +dared not, say anything! + +"We must be patient," said he, "and wait--" + +"Wait--for what? Till he's dead?" + +"Don't speak so." + +"Why not?" Bertha went up to him, and in a low voice, muttered: + +"He has only a week to live; and see here--" + +She drew a little vial from her pocket, and held it up to him. + +"That is what convinces me that I am not mistaken." + +Hector became livid, and could not stifle a cry of horror. He +comprehended all now--he saw how it was that Bertha had been so easily +subdued, why she had refrained from speaking of Laurence, her strange +words, her calm confidence. + +"Poison!" stammered he, confounded. + +"Yes, poison." + +"You have not used it?" + +She fixed a hard, stern look upon him--the look which had subdued his +will, against which he had struggled in vain--and in a calm voice, +emphasizing each word, answered: + +"I have used it." + +The count was, indeed, a dangerous man, unscrupulous, not recoiling from +any wickedness when his passions were to be indulged, capable of +everything; but this horrible crime awoke in him all that remained of +honest energy. + +"Well," he cried, in disgust, "you will not use it again!" + +He hastened toward the door, shuddering; she stopped him. + +"Reflect before you act," said she, coldly. "I will betray the fact of +your relations with me; who will then believe that you are not my +accomplice?" + +He saw the force of this terrible menace, coming from Bertha. + +"Come," said she, ironically, "speak--betray me if you choose. Whatever +happens, for happiness or misery, we shall no longer be separated; our +destinies will be the same." + +Hector fell heavily into a chair, more overwhelmed than if he had been +struck with a hammer. He held his bursting forehead between his hands; +he saw himself shut up in an infernal circle, without outlet. + +"I am lost!" he stammered, without knowing what he said, "I am lost!" + +He was to be pitied; his face was terribly haggard, great drops of +perspiration stood at the roots of his hair, his eyes wandered as if he +were insane. Bertha shook him rudely by the arm, for his cowardice +exasperated her. + +"You are afraid," she said. "You are trembling! Lost? You would not say +so, if you loved me as I do you. Will you be lost because I am to be +your wife, because we shall be free to love in the face of all the +world? Lost! Then you have no idea of what I have endured? You don't +know, then, that I am tired of suffering, fearing, feigning." + +"Such a crime!" + +She burst out with a laugh that made him shudder. + +"You ought to have said so," said she, with a look full of contempt, +"the day you won me from Sauvresy--the day that you stole the wife of +this friend who saved your life. Do you think that was a less horrid +crime? You knew as well as I did how much my husband loved me, and that +he would have preferred to die, rather than lose me thus." + +"But he knows nothing, suspects nothing of it." + +"You are mistaken; Sauvresy knows all." + +"Impossible!" + +"All, I tell you--and he has known all since that day when he came home +so late from hunting. Don't you remember that I noticed his strange +look, and said to you that my husband suspected something? You shrugged +your shoulders. Do you forget the steps in the vestibule the night I +went to your room? He had been spying on us. Well, do you want a more +certain proof? Look at this letter, which I found, crumpled up and wet, +in one of his vest pockets." + +She showed him the letter which Sauvresy had forcibly taken from Jenny, +and he recognized it well. + +"It is a fatality," said he, overwhelmed. "But we can separate and break +off with each other. Bertha, I can go away." + +"It's too late. Believe me, Hector, we are to-day defending our lives. +Ah, you don't know Clement! You don't know what the fury of a man like +him can be, when he sees that his confidence has been outrageously +abused, and his trust vilely betrayed. If he has said nothing to me, and +has not let us see any traces of his implacable anger, it is because he +is meditating some frightful vengeance." + +This was only too probable, and Hector saw it clearly. + +"What shall we do?" he asked, in a hoarse voice; he was almost +speechless. + +"Find out what change he has made in his will." + +"But how?" + +"I don't know yet. I came to ask your advice, and I find you more +cowardly than a woman. Let me act, then; don't do anything yourself; I +will do all." + +He essayed an objection. + +"Enough," said she. "He must not ruin us after all--I will see--I will +think." + +Someone below called her. She went down, leaving Hector overcome with +despair. + +That evening, during which Bertha seemed happy and smiling, his face +finally betrayed so distinctly the traces of his anguish, that Sauvresy +tenderly asked him if he were not ill? + +"You exhaust yourself tending on me, my good Hector," said he. "How can +I ever repay your devotion?" + +Tremorel had not the strength to reply. + +"And that man knows all," thought he. "What courage! What fate can he be +reserving for us?" + +The scene which was passing before Hector's eyes made his flesh creep. +Every time that Bertha gave her husband his medicine, she took a +hair-pin from her tresses, and plunged it into the little vial which she +had shown him, taking up thus some small, white grains, which she +dissolved in the potions prescribed by the doctor. + +It might be supposed that Tremorel, enslaved by his horrid position, and +harassed by increasing terror, would renounce forever his proposed +marriage with Laurence. Not so. He clung to that project more +desperately than ever. Bertha's threats, the great obstacles now +intervening, his anguish, crime, only augmented the violence of his love +for her, and fed the flame of his ambition to secure her as his wife. A +small and flickering ray of hope which lighted the darkness of his +despair, consoled and revived him, and made the present more easy to +bear. He said to himself that Bertha could not be thinking of marrying +him the day after her husband's death. Months, a whole year must pass, +and thus he would gain time; then some day he would declare his will. +What would she have to say? Would she divulge the crime, and try to hold +him as her accomplice? Who would believe her? How could she prove that +he, who loved and had married another woman, had any interest in +Sauvresy's death? People don't kill their friends for the mere pleasure +of it. Would she provoke the law to exhume her husband? She was now in a +position, thought he, wherein she could, or would not exercise her +reason. Later on, she would reflect, and then she would be arrested by +the probability of those dangers, the certainty of which did not now +terrify her. + +He did not wish that she should ever be his wife at any price. He would +have detested her had she possessed millions; he hated her now that she +was poor, ruined, reduced to her own narrow means. And that she was so, +there was no doubt, Sauvresy indeed knew all. He was content to wait; he +knew that Laurence loved him enough to wait for him one, or three years, +if necessary. He already had such absolute power over her, that she did +not try to combat the thoughts of him, which gently forced themselves on +her, penetrated to her soul, and filled her mind and heart. Hector said +to himself that in the interest of his designs, perhaps it was well that +Bertha was acting as she did. He forced himself to stifle his conscience +in trying to prove that he was not guilty. Who thought of this crime? +Bertha. Who was executing it? She alone. He could only be reproached +with moral complicity in it, a complicity involuntary, forced upon him, +imposed somehow by the care for his own life. Sometimes, however, a +bitter remorse seized him. He could have understood a sudden, violent, +rapid murder; could have explained to himself a knife-stroke; but this +slow death, given drop by drop, horribly sweetened by tenderness, veiled +under kisses, appeared to him unspeakably hideous. He was mortally +afraid of Bertha, as of a reptile, and when she embraced him he +shuddered from head to foot. + +She was so calm, so engaging, so natural; her voice had the same soft +and caressing tones, that he could not forget it. She plunged her +hair-pin into the fatal vial without ceasing her conversation, and he +did not surprise her in any shrinking or shuddering, nor even a +trembling of the eyelids. She must have been made of brass. Yet he +thought that she was not cautious enough; and that she put herself in +danger of discovery; and he told her of these fears, and how she made +him tremble every moment. + +"Have confidence in me," she answered. "I want to succeed--I am +prudent." + +"But you may be suspected." + +"By whom?" + +"Eh! How do I know? Everyone--the servants, the doctor." + +"No danger. And suppose they did suspect?" + +"They would make examinations, Bertha; they would make a minute +scrutiny." + +She gave a smile of the most perfect security. + +"They might examine and experiment as much as they pleased, they would +find nothing. Do you think I am such a fool as to use arsenic?" + +"For Heaven's sake, hush!" + +"I have procured one of those poisons which are as yet unknown, and +which defy all analysis; one of which many doctors--and learned ones, +too--could not even tell the symptoms!" + +"But where did you get this--this--" + +He dared not say, "poison." + +"Who gave you that?" resumed he. + +"What matters it? I have taken care that he who gave it to me should run +the same danger as myself, and he knows it. There's nothing to fear from +that quarter. I've paid him enough to smother all his regrets." + +An objection came to his lips; he wanted to say, "It's too slow;" but he +had not the courage, though she read his thought in his eyes. + +"It is slow, because that suits me," said she. "Before all, I must know +about the will--and that I am trying to find out." + +She occupied herself constantly about this will, and during the long +hours that she passed at Sauvresy's bedside, she gradually, with the +greatest craft and delicacy, led her husband's mind in the direction of +his last testament, with such success that he himself mentioned the +subject which so absorbed Bertha. + +He said that he did not comprehend why people did not always have their +worldly affairs in order, and their wishes fully written down, in case +of accident. What difference did it make whether one were ill or well? +At these words Bertha attempted to stop him. Such ideas, she said, +pained her too much. She even shed real tears, which fell down her +cheeks and made her more beautiful and irresistible than before; real +tears which moistened her handkerchief. + +"You dear silly creature," said Sauvresy, "do you think that makes one +die?" + +"No; but I do not wish it." + +"But, dear, have we been any the less happy because, on the day after +our marriage, I made a will bequeathing you all my fortune? And, stop; +you have a copy of it, haven't you? If you were kind, you would go and +fetch it for me." + +She became very red, then very pale. Why did he ask for this copy? Did +he want to tear it up? A sudden thought reassured her; people do not +tear up a document which can be cancelled by a scratch of the pen on +another sheet of paper. Still, she hesitated a moment. + +"I don't know where it can be." + +"But I do. It is in the left-hand drawer of the glass cupboard; come, +please me by getting it." + +While she was gone, Sauvresy said to Hector: + +"Poor girl! Poor dear Bertha! If I died, she never would survive me!" + +Tremorel thought of nothing to reply; his anxiety was intense and +visible. + +"And this man," thought he, "suspects something! No; it is not +possible." + +Bertha returned. + +"I have found it," said she. + +"Give it to me." + +He took the copy of his will, and read it with evident satisfaction, +nodding his head at certain passages in which he referred to his love +for his wife. When he had finished reading, he said: + +"Now give me a pen and some ink." + +Hector and Bertha reminded him that it would fatigue him to write; but +he insisted. The two guilty ones, seated at the foot of the bed and out +of Sauvresy's sight, exchanged looks of alarm. What was he going to +write? But he speedily finished it. + +"Take this," said he to Tremorel, "and read aloud what I have just +added." + +Hector complied with his friend's request, with trembling voice: + +"This day, being sound in mind, though much suffering, I declare that I +do not wish to change a line of this will. Never have I loved my wife +more--never have I so much desired to leave her the heiress of all I +possess, should I die before her. + +"CLEMENT SAUVRESY." + + +Mistress of herself as Bertha was, she succeeded in concealing the +unspeakable satisfaction with which she was filled. All her wishes were +accomplished, and yet she was able to veil her delight under an apparent +sadness. + +"Of what good is this?" said she, with a sigh. + +She said this, but half an hour afterward, when she was alone with +Hector, she gave herself up to the extravagance of her delight. + +"Nothing more to fear," exclaimed she. "Nothing! Now we shall have +liberty, fortune, love, pleasure, life! Why, Hector, we shall have at +least three millions; you see, I've got this will myself, and I shall +keep it. No more agents or notaries shall be admitted into this house +henceforth. Now I must hasten!" + +The count certainly felt a satisfaction in knowing her to be rich, for +he could much more easily get rid of a millionnaire widow than of a poor +penniless woman. Sauvresy's conduct thus calmed many sharp anxieties. +Her restless gayety, however, her confident security, seemed monstrous +to Hector. He would have wished for more solemnity in the execution of +the crime; he thought that he ought at least to calm Bertha's delirium. + +"You will think more than once of Sauvresy," said he, in a graver tone. + +She answered with a "prrr," and added vivaciously: + +"Of him? when and why? Oh, his memory will not weigh on me very heavily. +I trust that we shall be able to live still at Valfeuillu, for the place +pleases me; but we must also have a house at Paris--or we will buy yours +back again. What happiness, Hector!" + +The mere prospect of this anticipated felicity so shocked Hector, that +his better self for the moment got the mastery; he essayed to move +Bertha. + +"For the last time," said he, "I implore you to renounce this terrible, +dangerous project. You see that you were mistaken--that Sauvresy +suspects nothing, but loves you as well as ever." + +The expression of Bertha's face suddenly changed; she sat quite still, +in a pensive revery. + +"Don't let's talk any more of that," said she, at last. "Perhaps I was +mistaken. Perhaps he only had doubts--perhaps, although he has +discovered something, he hopes to win me back by his goodness. But you +see--" + +She stopped. Doubtless she did not wish to alarm him. + +He was already much alarmed. The next day he went off to Melun without a +word; being unable to bear the sight of this agony, and fearing to +betray himself. But he left his address, and when she sent word that +Sauvresy was always crying out for him, he hastily returned. Her letter +was most imprudent and absurd, and made his hair stand on end. He had +intended, on his arrival, to reproach her; but it was she who upbraided +him. + +"Why this flight?" + +"I could not stay here--I suffered, trembled, felt as if I were dying." + +"What a coward you are!" + +He would have replied, but she put her finger on his mouth, and pointed +with her other hand to the door of the next room. + +"Sh! Three doctors have been in consultation there for the past hour, +and I haven't been able to hear a word of what they said. Who knows what +they are about? I shall not be easy till they go away." + +Bertha's fears were not without foundation. When Sauvresy had his last +relapse, and complained of a severe neuralgia in the face and an +irresistible craving for pepper, Dr. R--- had uttered a significant +exclamation. It was nothing, perhaps--yet Bertha had heard it, and she +thought she surprised a sudden suspicion on the doctor's part; and this +now disturbed her, for she thought that it might be the subject of the +consultation. The suspicion, however, if there had ever been any, +quickly vanished. The symptoms entirely changed twelve hours later, and +the next day the sick man felt pains quite the opposite of those which +had previously distressed him. This very inconstancy of the distemper +served to puzzle the doctor's conclusions. Sauvresy, in these latter +days, had scarcely suffered at all, he said, and had slept well at +night; but he had, at times, strange and often distressing sensations. +He was evidently failing hourly; he was dying--everyone perceived it. +And now Dr. R--- asked for a consultation, the result of which had not +been reached when Tremorel returned. + +The drawing-room door at last swung open, and the calm faces of the +physicians reassured the poisoner. Their conclusions were that the case +was hopeless; everything had been tried and exhausted; no human +resources had been neglected; the only hope was in Sauvresy's strong +constitution. + +Bertha, colder than marble, motionless, her eyes full of tears, seemed +so full of grief on hearing this cruel decision, that all the doctors +were touched. + +"Is there no hope then? Oh, my God!" cried she, in agonizing tones. + +Dr. R--- hardly dared to attempt to comfort her; he answered her +questions evasively. + +"We must never despair," said he, "when the invalid is of Sauvresy's age +and constitution; nature often works miracles when least expected." + +The doctor, however, lost no time in taking Hector apart and begging him +to prepare the poor, devoted, loving young lady for the terrible blow +about to ensue. + +"For you see," added he, "I don't think Monsieur Sauvresy can live more +than two days!" + +Bertha, with her ear at the keyhole, had heard the doctor's prediction; +and when Hector returned from conducting the physician to the door, he +found her radiant. She rushed into his arms. + +"Now" cried she, "the future truly belongs to us. Only one black point +obscured our horizon, and it has cleared away. It is for me to realize +Doctor R--- 's prediction." They dined together, as usual, in the +dining-room, while one of the chambermaids remained beside the sick-bed. +Bertha was full of spirits which she could scarcely control. The +certainty of success and safety, the assurance of reaching the end, made +her imprudently gay. She spoke aloud, even in the presence of the +servants, of her approaching liberty. During the evening she was more +reckless than ever. If any of the servants should have a suspicion, or a +shadow of one she might be discovered and lost. Hector constantly nudged +her under the table and frowned at her, to keep her quiet; he felt his +blood run cold at her conduct; all in vain. There are times when the +armor of hypocrisy becomes so burdensome that one is forced, cost what +it may, to throw it off if only for an instant. + +While Hector was smoking his cigar, Bertha was more freely pursuing her +dream. She was thinking that she could spend the period of her mourning +at Valfeuillu, and Hector, for the sake of appearances, would hire a +pretty little house somewhere in the suburbs. The worst of it all was +that she would be forced to seem to mourn for Sauvresy, as she had +pretended to love him during his lifetime. But at last a day would come +when, without scandal, she might throw off her mourning clothes, and +then they would get married. Where? At Paris or Orcival? + +Hector's thoughts ran in the same channel. He, too, wished to see his +friend under the ground to end his own terrors, and to submit to +Bertha's terrible yoke. + + + + +XX + + +Time passed. Hector and Bertha repaired to Sauvresy's room; he was +asleep. They noiselessly took chairs beside the fire, as usual, and the +maid retired. In order that the sick man might not be disturbed by the +light of the lamp, curtains had been hung so that, when lying down, he +could not see the fireplace and mantel. In order to see these, he must +have raised himself on his pillow and leaned forward on his right arm. +But now he was asleep, breathing painfully, feverish, and shuddering +convulsively. Bertha and Hector did not speak; the solemn and sinister +silence was only broken by the ticking of the clock, or by the leaves of +the book which Hector was reading. Ten o'clock struck; soon after +Sauvresy moved, turned over, and awoke. Bertha was at his side in an +instant; she saw that his eyes were open. + +"Do you feel a little better, dear Clement?" she asked. + +"Neither better nor worse." + +"Do you want anything?" + +"I am thirsty." + +Hector, who had raised his eyes when his friend spoke, suddenly resumed +his reading. + +Bertha, standing by the mantel, began to prepare with great care Dr. +R--- 's last prescription; when it was ready, she took out the fatal +little vial as usual, and thrust one of her hair-pins into it. + +She had not time to draw it out before she felt a light touch upon her +shoulder. A shudder shook her from head to foot; she suddenly turned and +uttered a loud scream, a cry of terror and horror. + +"Oh!" + +The hand which had touched her was her husband's. While she was busied +with the poison at the mantel, Sauvresy had softly raised himself; more +softly still, he had pulled the curtain aside, and had stretched out his +arm and touched her. His eyes glittered with hate and anger. + +Bertha's cry was answered by another dull cry, or rather groan; Tremorel +had seen and comprehended all; he was overwhelmed. + +"All is discovered!" Their eyes spoke these three words to each other. +They saw them everywhere, written in letters of fire. There was a moment +of stupor, of silence so profound that Hector heard his temples beat. +Sauvresy had got back under the bed-clothes again. He laughed loudly, +wildly, just as a skeleton might have laughed whose jaws and teeth +rattled together. + +But Bertha was not one of those persons who are overcome by a single +blow, terrible as it might be. She trembled like a leaf; her legs +staggered; but her mind was already at work seeking a subterfuge. What +had Sauvresy seen--anything? What did he know? For even had he seen the +vial, this might be explained. It could only have been by simple chance +that he had touched her at the moment when she was using the poison. All +these thoughts flashed across her mind in a moment, as rapid as +lightning shooting between the clouds. And then she dared to approach +the bed, and, with a frightfully constrained smile, to say: + +"How you frightened me then!" + +He looked at her a moment, which seemed to her an age--and simply +replied: + +"I understand it." + +There was no longer any uncertainty. Bertha saw only too well in her +husband's eyes that he knew something. But what--how much? She nerved +herself to go on: + +"Are you still suffering?" + +"No." + +"Then why did you get up?" + +He raised himself upon his pillow, and with a sudden strength, he +continued: + +"I got up to tell you that I have had enough of these tortures, that I +have reached the limits of human energy, that I cannot endure one day +longer the agony of seeing myself put to death slowly, drop by drop, by +the hands of my wife and my best friend!" + +He stopped. Hector and Bertha were thunderstruck. "I wanted to tell you +also, that I have had enough of your cruel caution, and that I suffer. +Ah, don't you see that I suffer horribly? Hurry, cut short my agony! +Kill me, and kill me at a blow--poisoners!" + +At the last word, the Count de Tremorel sprang up as if he had moved by +a spring, his eyes haggard, his arms stretched out. Sauvresy, seeing +this, quickly slipped his hand under the pillow, pulled out a revolver, +and pointed the barrel at Hector, crying out: + +"Don't advance a step!" + +He thought that Tremorel, seeing that they were discovered, was going to +rush upon him and strangle him; but he was mistaken. It seemed to Hector +as though he were losing his mind. He fell down as heavily as if he were +a log. Bertha was more self-possessed; she tried to resist the torpor of +terror which she felt coming on. + +"You are worse, my Clement," said she. "This is that dreadful fever +which frightens me so. Delirium--" + +"Have I really been delirious?" interrupted he, with a surprised air. + +"Alas, yes, dear, that is what haunts you, and fills your poor sick head +with horrid visions." + +He looked at her curiously. He was really stupefied by this boldness, +which constantly grew more bold. + +"What! you think that we, who are so dear to you, your friends, I, +your--" + +Her husband's implacable look forced her to stop, and the words expired +on her lips. + +"Enough of these lies, Bertha," resumed Sauvresy, "they are useless. No, +I have not been dreaming, nor have I been delirious. The poison is only +too real, and I could tell you what it is without your taking it out of +your pocket." + +She recoiled as if she had seen her husband's hand stretched out to +snatch the blue vial. + +"I guessed it and recognized it at the very first; for you have chosen +one of those poisons which, it is true, leave scarcely any trace of +themselves, but the symptoms of which are not deceptive. Do you remember +the day when I complained of a morbid taste for pepper? The next day I +was certain of it, and I was not the only one. Doctor R---, too, had a +suspicion." + +Bertha tried to stammer something; her husband interrupted her. + +"People ought to try their poisons," pursued he, in an ironical tone, +"before they use them. Didn't you understand yours, or what its effects +were? Why, your poison gives intolerable neuralgia, sleeplessness, and +you saw me without surprise, sleeping soundly all night long! I +complained of a devouring fire within me, while your poison freezes the +blood and the entrails, and yet you are not astonished. You see all the +symptoms change and disappear, and that does not enlighten you. You are +fools, then. Now see what I had to do to divert Doctor R--- 's +suspicions. I hid the real pains which your poison caused, and +complained of imaginary, ridiculous ones. I described sensations just +the opposite of those which I felt. You were lost, then--and I saved +you." + +Bertha's malignant energy staggered beneath so many successive blows. +She wondered whether she were not going mad; had she heard aright? Was +it really true that her husband had perceived that he was being +poisoned, and yet said nothing; nay, that he had even deceived the +doctor? Why? What was his purpose? + +Sauvresy paused several minutes, and then went on: + +"I have held my tongue and so saved you, because the sacrifice of my +life had already been made. Yes, I had been fatally wounded in the heart +on the day that I learned that you were faithless to me." + +He spoke of his death without apparent emotion; but at the words, "You +were faithless to me," his voice faltered and trembled. + +"I would not, could not believe it at first. I doubted the evidence of +my senses, rather than doubt you. But I was forced to believe at last. I +was no longer anything in my house but a laughing-stock. But I was in +your way. You and your lover needed more room and liberty. You were +tired of constraint and hypocrisy. Then it was that, believing that my +death would make you free and rich, you brought in poison to rid +yourselves of me." + +Bertha had at least the heroism of crime. All was discovered; well, she +threw down the mask. She tried to defend her accomplice, who lay +unconscious in a chair. + +"It is I that have done it all," cried she. "He is innocent." + +Sauvresy turned pale with rage. + +"Ah, really," said he, "my friend Hector is innocent! It wasn't he, +then, who, to pay me up--not for his life, for he was too cowardly to +kill himself; but for his honor, which he owes to me--took my wife from +me? Wretch! I hold out my hand to him when he is drowning, I welcome him +like a brother, and in return, he desolates my hearth!... And you +knew what you were doing, my friend Hector--for I told you a hundred +times that my wife was my all here below, my present and my future, my +dream and happiness and hope and very life! You knew that for me to lose +her was to die. But if you had loved her--no, it was not that you loved +her; you hated me. Envy devoured you, and you could not tell me to my +face, 'You are too happy.' Then, like a coward, you dishonored me in the +dark. Bertha was only the instrument of your rancor; and she weighs upon +you to-day--you despise and fear her. My friend, Hector, you have been +in this house the vile lackey who thinks to avenge his baseness by +spitting upon the meats which he puts on his master's table!" + +The count only responded by a shudder. The dying man's terrible words +fell more cruelly on his conscience than blows upon his cheek. + +"See, Bertha," continued Sauvresy, "that's the man whom you have +preferred to me, and for whom you have betrayed me. You never loved +me--I see it now--your heart was never Mine. And I--I loved you so! From +the day I first saw you, you were my only thought; as if your heart had +beaten in place of Mine. Everything about you was dear and precious to +me; I adored your whims, caprices, even your faults. There was nothing I +would not do for a smile from you, so that you would say to me, Thank +you, between two kisses. You don't know that for years after our +marriage it was my delight to wake up first so as to gaze upon you as +you lay asleep, to admire and touch your lovely hair, lying dishevelled +across the pillow. Bertha!" + +He softened at the remembrance of these past joys, which would not come +again. He forgot their presence, the infamous treachery, the poison; +that he was about to die, murdered by this beloved wife; and his eyes +filled with tears, his voice choked. + +Bertha, more motionless and pallid than marble, listened to him +breathlessly. + +"It is true, then," continued the sick man, "that these lovely eyes +conceal a soul of filth! Ah, who would not have been deceived, as I was? +Bertha, what did you dream of when you were sleeping in my arms? +Tremorel came, and you thought you saw in him the ideal of your dreams. +You admired the precocious wrinkles which betrayed an exhausted life, +like the fatal seal which marks the fallen archangel's forehead. Your +love, without thought of mine, rushed toward him, though he did not +think of you. You went to evil as if it were your nature. And yet I +thought you more immaculate than the Alpine snows. You did not even have +a struggle with yourself; you betrayed no confusion which would reveal +your first fault to me. You brought me your forehead soiled with his +kisses without blushing." + +Weariness overcame his energies; his voice became little by little +feebler and less distinct. + +"You had your happiness in your hands, Bertha, and you carelessly +destroyed it, as the child breaks the toy of whose value he is ignorant. +What did you expect from this wretch for whom you had the frightful +courage to kill me, with a kiss upon your lips, slowly, hour by hour? +You thought you loved him, but disgust ought to have come at last. Look +at him, and judge between us. See which is the--man--I, extended on this +bed where I shall soon die, or he shivering there in a corner. You have +the energy of crime, but he has only the baseness of it. Ah, if my name +was Hector de Tremorel, and a man had spoken as I have just done, that +man should live no longer, even if he had ten revolvers like this I am +holding to defend himself with!" + +Hector, thus taunted, tried to get up and reply; but his legs would not +support him, and his throat only gave hoarse, unintelligible sounds. +Bertha, as she looked at the two men, recognized her error with rage and +indignation. Her husband, at this moment, seemed to her sublime; his +eyes gleamed, his face was radiant; while the other--the other! She felt +sick with disgust when she but glanced toward him. + +Thus all these deceptive chimeras after which she had run, love, +passion, poetry, were already hers; she had held them in her hands and +she had not been able to perceive it. But what was Sauvresy's purpose? + +He continued, painfully: + +"This then, is our situation; you have killed me, you are going to be +free, yet you hate and despise each other--" + +He stopped, and seemed to be suffocating; he tried to raise himself on +his pillow and to sit up in bed, but found himself too feeble. + +"Bertha," said he, "help me get up." + +She leaned over the bed, and taking her husband in her arms, succeeded +in placing him as he wished. He appeared more at ease in his new +position, and took two or three long breaths. + +"Now," he said, "I should like something to drink. The doctor lets me +take a little old wine, if I have a fancy for it; give me some." + +She hastened to bring him a glass of wine, which he emptied and handed +back to her. + +"There wasn't any poison in it, was there?" he asked. + +This ghastly question and the smile which accompanied it, melted +Bertha's callousness; remorse had already taken possession of her, as +her disgust of Tremorel increased. + +"Poison?" she cried, eagerly, "never!" + +"You must give me some, though, presently, so as to help me to die." + +"You die, Clement? No; I want you to live, so that I may redeem the +past. I am a wretch, and have committed a hideous crime--but you are +good. You will live; I don't ask to be your wife, but only your servant. +I will love you, humiliate myself, serve you on my knees, so that some +day, after ten, twenty years of expiation, you will forgive me!" + +Hector in his mortal terror and anguish, was scarcely able to +distinguish what was taking place. But he saw a dim ray of hope in +Bertha's gestures and accent, and especially in her last words; he +thought that perhaps it was all going to end and be forgotten, and that +Sauvresy would pardon them. Half-rising, he stammered: + +"Yes, forgive us, forgive us!" + +Sauvresy's eyes glittered, and his angry voice vibrated as if it came +from a throat of metal. + +"Forgive!" cried he, "pardon! Did you have pity on me during all this +year that you have been playing with my happiness, during this fortnight +that you have been mixing poison in all my potions? Pardon? What, are +you fools? Why do you think I held my tongue, when I discovered your +infamy, and let myself be poisoned, and threw the doctors off the scent? +Do you really hope that I did this to prepare a scene of heartrending +farewells, and to give you my benediction at the end? Ah, know me +better!" + +Bertha was sobbing; she tried to take her husband's hand, but he rudely +repulsed her. + +"Enough of these falsehoods," said he. "Enough of these perfidies. I +hate you! You don't seem to perceive that hate is all that is still +living in me." + +Sauvresy's expression was at this moment ferocious. "It is almost two +months since I learned the truth; it broke me up, soul and body. Ah, it +cost me a good deal to keep quiet--it almost killed me. But one thought +sustained me; I longed to avenge myself. My mind was always bent on +that; I searched for a punishment as great as this crime; I found none, +could find none. Then you resolved to poison me. Mark this--that the +very day when I guessed about the poison I had a thrill of joy, for I +had discovered my vengeance!" + +A constantly increasing terror possessed Bertha, and now stupefied her, +as well as Tremorel. + +"Why do you wish for my death? To be free and marry each other? Very +well; I wish that also. The Count de Tremorel will be Madame Sauvresy's +second husband." + +"Never!" cried Bertha. "No, never!" + +"Never!" echoed Hector. + +"It shall be so; nevertheless because I wish it. Oh, my precautions have +been well taken, and you can't escape me. Now hear me. When I became +certain that I was being poisoned, I began to write a minute history of +all three of us; I did more--I have kept a journal day by day and hour +by hour, narrating all the particulars of my illness; then I kept some +of the poison which you gave me--" + +Bertha made a gesture of denial. Sauvresy proceeded: + +"Certainly, I kept it, and I will tell you how. Every time that Bertha +gave me a suspicious potion, I kept a portion of it in my mouth, and +carefully ejected it into a bottle which I kept hid under the bolster. +Ah, you ask how I could have done all this without your suspecting it, +or without being seen by any of the servants. Know that hate is stronger +than love, be sure that I have left nothing to chance, nor have I +forgotten anything." + +Hector and Bertha looked at Sauvresy with a dull, fixed gaze. They +forced themselves to understand him, but could scarcely do so. + +"Let's finish," resumed the dying man, "my strength is waning. This very +morning, the bottle containing the poison I have preserved, our +biographies, and the narrative of my poisoning, have been put in the +hands of a trustworthy and devoted person, whom, even if you knew him, +you could not corrupt. He does not know the contents of what has been +confided to him. The day that you get married this friend will give them +all up to you. If, however, you are not married in a year from to-day, +he has instructions to put these papers and this bottle into the hands +of the officers of the law." + +A double cry of horror and anguish told Sauvresy that he had well chosen +his vengeance. + +"And reflect," added he, "that this package once delivered up to +justice, means the galleys, if not the scaffold for both of you." + +Sauvresy had overtasked his strength. He fell panting upon the bed, his +mouth open, his eyes filmy, and his features so distorted that he seemed +to be on the point of death. But neither Bertha nor Tremorel thought of +trying to relieve him. They remained opposite each other with dilated +eyes, stupefied, as if their thoughts were bent upon the torments of +that future which the implacable vengeance of the man whom they had +outraged imposed upon them. They were indissolubly united, confounded in +a common destiny; nothing could separate them but death. A chain +stronger and harder than that of the galley-slave bound them together; a +chain of infamies and crimes, of which the first link was a kiss, and +the last a murder by poison. Now Sauvresy might die; his vengeance was +on their heads, casting a cloud upon their sun. Free in appearance, they +would go through life crushed by the burden of the past, more slaves +than the blacks in the American rice-fields. Separated by mutual hate +and contempt, they saw themselves riveted together by the common terror +of punishment, condemned to an eternal embrace. + +Bertha at this moment admired her husband. Now that he was so feeble +that he breathed as painfully as an infant, she looked upon him as +something superhuman. She had had no idea of such constancy and courage +allied with so much dissimulation and genius. How cunningly he had found +them out! How well he had known how to avenge himself! To be the master, +he had only to will it. In a certain way she rejoiced in the strange +atrocity of this scene; she felt something like a bitter pride in being +one of the actors in it. At the same time she was transported with rage +and sorrow in thinking that she had had this man in her power, that he +had been at her feet. She almost loved him. Of all men, it was he whom +she would have chosen were she mistress of her destinies; and he was +going to escape her. + +Tremorel, while these strange ideas crowded upon Bertha's mind, began to +come to himself. The certainty that Laurence was now forever lost for +him occurred to him, and his despair was without bounds. The silence +continued a full quarter of an hour. Sauvresy at last subdued the spasm +which had exhausted him, and spoke. + +"I have not said all yet," he commenced. + +His voice was as feeble as a murmur, and yet it seemed terrible to his +hearers. + +"You shall see whether I have reckoned and foreseen well. Perhaps, when +I was dead, the idea of flying and going abroad would strike you. I +shall not permit that. You must stay at Orcival--at Valfeuillu. +A--friend--not he with the package--is charged, without knowing the +reason for it, with the task of watching you. Mark well what I say--if +either of you should disappear for eight days, on the ninth, the man who +has the package would receive a letter which would cause him to resort +at once to the police." + +Yes, he had foreseen all, and Tremorel, who had already thought of +flight, was overwhelmed. + +"I have so arranged, besides, that the idea of flight shall not tempt +you too much. It is true I have left all my fortune to Bertha, but I +only give her the use of it; the property itself will not be hers until +the day after your marriage." + +Bertha made a gesture of repugnance which her husband misinterpreted. + +"You are thinking of the copy of my will which is in your possession. It +is a useless one, and I only added to it some valueless words because I +wanted to put your suspicions to sleep. My true will is in the notary's +hands, and bears a date two days later. I can read you the rough draft +of it." + +He took a sheet of paper from a portfolio which was concealed; like the +revolver, under the bolster, and read: + +"Being stricken with a fatal malady, I here set down freely, and in the +fulness of my faculties, my last wishes: + +"My dearest wish is that my well-beloved widow, Bertha, should espouse, +as soon as the delay enjoined by law has expired, my dear friend, the +Count Hector de Tremorel. Having appreciated the grandeur of soul and +nobleness of sentiment which belong to my wife and friend, I know that +they are worthy of each other, and that each will be happy in the other. +I die the more peacefully, as I leave my Bertha to a protector whose--" + +It was impossible for Bertha to hear more. + +"For pity's sake," cried she, "enough." + +"Enough? Well, let it be so," responded Sauvresy. "I have read this +paper to you to show you that while I have arranged everything to insure +the execution of my will; I have also done all that can preserve to you +the world's respect. Yes, I wish that you should be esteemed and +honored, for it is you alone upon whom I rely for my vengeance. I have +knit around you a net-work which you can never burst asunder. You +triumph; my tombstone shall be, as you hoped, the altar of your +nuptials, or else--the galleys." + +Tremorel's pride at last revolted against so many humiliations, so many +whip-strokes lashing his face. + +"You have only forgotten one thing, Sauvresy; that a man can die." + +"Pardon me," replied the sick man, coldly. "I have foreseen that also, +and was just going to tell you so. Should one of you die suddenly before +the marriage, the police will be called in." + +"You misunderstood me; I meant that a man can kill himself." + +"You kill yourself? Humph! Jenny, who disdains you almost as much as I +do, has told me about your threats to kill yourself. You! See here; here +is my revolver; shoot yourself, and I will forgive my wife!" + +Hector made a gesture of anger, but did not take the pistol. + +"You see," said Sauvresy, "I knew it well. You are afraid." Turning to +Bertha, he added, "This is your lover." + +Extraordinary situations like this are so unwonted and strange that the +actors in them almost always remain composed and natural, as if +stupefied. Bertha, Hector, and Sauvresy accepted, without taking note of +it, the strange position in which they found themselves; and they talked +naturally, as if of matters of every-day life, and not of terrible +events. But the hours flew, and Sauvresy perceived his life to be ebbing +from him. + +"There only remains one more act to play," said he. "Hector, go and call +the servants, have those who have gone to bed aroused, I want to see +them before dying." + +Tremorel hesitated. + +"Come, go along; or shall I ring, or fire a pistol to bring them here?" + +Hector went out; Bertha remained alone with her husband--alone! She had +a hope that perhaps she might succeed in making him change his purpose, +and that she might obtain his forgiveness. She knelt beside the bed. +Never had she been so beautiful, so seductive, so irresistible. The keen +emotions of the evening had brought her whole soul into her face, and +her lovely eyes supplicated, her breast heaved, her mouth was held out +as if for a kiss, and her new-born passion for Sauvresy burst out into +delirium. + +"Clement," she stammered, in a voice full of tenderness, "my husband, +Clement!" + +He directed toward her a glance of hatred. + +"What do you wish?" + +She did not know how to begin--she hesitated, trembled and sobbed. + +"Hector would not kill himself," said she, "but I--" + +"Well, what do you wish to say? Speak!" + +"It was I, a wretch, who have killed you. I will not survive you." + +An inexpressible anguish distorted Sauvresy's features. She kill +herself! If so, his vengeance was vain; his own death would then appear +only ridiculous and absurd. And he knew that Bertha would not be wanting +in courage at the critical moment. + +She waited, while he reflected. + +"You are free," said he, at last, "this would merely be a sacrifice to +Hector. If you died, he would marry Laurence Courtois, and in a year +would forget even our name." + +Bertha sprang to her feet; she pictured Hector to herself married and +happy. A triumphant smile, like a sun's ray, brightened Sauvresy's pale +face. He had touched the right chord. He might sleep in peace as to his +vengeance. Bertha would live. He knew how hateful to each other were +these enemies whom he left linked together. + +The servants came in one by one; nearly all of them had been long in +Sauvresy's service, and they loved him as a good master. They wept and +groaned to see him lying there so pale and haggard, with the stamp of +death already on his forehead. Sauvresy spoke to them in a feeble voice, +which was occasionally interrupted by distressing hiccoughs. He thanked +them, he said, for their attachment and fidelity, and wished to apprise +them that he had left each of them a goodly sum in his will. Then +turning to Bertha and Hector, he resumed: + +"You have witnessed, my people, the care and solicitude with which my +bedside has been surrounded by this incomparable friend and my adored +Bertha. You have seen their devotion. Alas, I know how keen their sorrow +will be! But if they wish to soothe my last moments and give me a happy +death, they will assent to the prayer which I earnestly make, to them, +and will swear to espouse each other after I am gone. Oh, my beloved +friends, this seems cruel to you now; but you know not how all human +pain is dulled in me. You are young, life has yet much happiness in +store for you. I conjure you yield to a dying man's entreaties!" + +They approached the bed, and Sauvresy put Bertha's hand into Hector's. + +"Do you swear to obey me?" asked he. + +They shuddered to hold each other's hands, and seemed near fainting; but +they answered, and were heard to murmur: + +"We swear it." + +The servants retired, grieved at this distressing scene, and Bertha +muttered: + +"Oh, 'tis infamous, 'tis horrible!" + +"Infamous--yes," returned Sauvresy, "but not more so than your caresses, +Bertha, or than your hand-pressures, Hector; not more horrible than your +plans, than your hopes--" + +His voice sank into a rattle. Soon the agony commenced. Horrible +convulsions distorted his limbs; twice or thrice he cried out: + +"I am cold; I am cold!" + +His body was indeed stiff, and nothing could warm it. + +Despair filled the house, for a death so sudden was not looked for. The +domestics came and went, whispering to each other, "He is going, poor +monsieur; poor madame!" + +Soon the convulsions ceased. He lay extended on his back, breathing so +feebly that twice they thought his breath had ceased forever. At last, a +little before ten o'clock, his cheeks suddenly colored and he shuddered. +He rose up in bed, his eye staring, his arm stretched out toward the +window, and he cried: + +"There--behind the curtain--I see them--I see them!" + +A last convulsion stretched him again on his pillow. + +Clement Sauvresy was dead! + + + + +XXI + + +The old justice of the peace ceased reading his voluminous record. His +hearers, the detective and the doctor remained silent under the +influence of this distressing narrative. M. Plantat had read it +impressively, throwing himself into the recital as if he had been +personally an actor in the scenes described. + +M. Lecoq was the first to recover himself. + +"A strange man, Sauvresy," said he. + +It was Sauvresy's extraordinary idea of vengeance which struck him in +the story. He admired his "good playing" in a drama in which he knew he +was going to yield up his life. + +"I don't know many people," pursued the detective, "capable of so +fearful a firmness. To let himself be poisoned so slowly and gently by +his wife! Brrr! It makes a man shiver all over!" + +"He knew how to avenge himself," muttered the doctor. + +"Yes," answered M. Plantat, "yes, Doctor; he knew how to avenge himself, +and more terribly than he supposed, or than you can imagine." + +The detective rose from his seat. He had remained motionless, glued to +his chair for more than three hours, and his legs were benumbed. + +"For my part," said he, "I can very well conceive what an infernal +existence the murderers began to suffer the day after their victim's +death. You have depicted them, Monsieur Plantat, with the hand of a +master. I know them as well after your description as if I had studied +them face to face for ten years." + +He spoke deliberately, and watched for the effect of what he said in M. +Plantat's countenance. + +"Where on earth did this old fellow get all these details?" he asked +himself. "Did he write this narrative, and if not, who did? How was it, +if he had all this information, that he has said nothing?" + +M. Plantat appeared to be unconscious of the detective's searching look. + +"I know that Sauvresy's body was not cold," said he, "before his +murderers began to threaten each other with death." + +"Unhappily for them," observed Dr. Gendron, "Sauvresy had foreseen the +probability of his widow's using up the rest of the vial of poison." + +"Ah, he was shrewd," said M. Lecoq, in a tone of conviction, "very +shrewd." + +"Bertha could not pardon Hector," continued M. Plantat, "for refusing to +take the revolver and blow his brains out; Sauvresy, you see, had +foreseen that. Bertha thought that if her lover were dead, her husband +would have forgotten all; and it is impossible to tell whether she was +mistaken or not." + +"And nobody knew anything of this horrible struggle that was going on in +the house?" + +"No one ever suspected anything." + +"It's marvellous!" + +"Say, Monsieur Lecoq, that is scarcely credible. Never was dissimulation +so crafty, and above all, so wonderfully sustained. If you should +question the first person you met in Orcival, he would tell you, as our +worthy Courtois this morning told Monsieur Domini, that the count and +countess were a model pair and adored each other. Why I, who knew--or +suspected, I should say--what had passed, was deceived myself." + +Promptly as M. Plantat had corrected himself, his slip of the tongue did +not escape M. Lecoq. + +"Was it really a slip, or not?" he asked himself. + +"These wretches have been terribly punished," pursued M. Plantat, "and +it is impossible to pity them; all would have gone rightly if Sauvresy, +intoxicated by his hatred, had not committed a blunder which was almost +a crime." + +"A crime!" exclaimed the doctor. + +M. Lecoq smiled and muttered in a low tone: + +"Laurence." + +But low as he had spoken, M. Plantat heard him. + +"Yes, Monsieur Lecoq," said he severely. "Yes, Laurence. Sauvresy did a +detestable thing when he thought of making this poor girl the +accomplice, or I should say, the instrument of his wrath. He piteously +threw her between these two wretches, without asking himself whether she +would be broken. It was by using Laurence's name that he persuaded +Bertha not to kill herself. Yet he knew of Tremorel's passion for her, +he knew her love for him, and he knew that his friend was capable of +anything. He, who had so well foreseen all that could serve his +vengeance, did not deign to foresee that Laurence might be dishonored; +and yet he left her disarmed before this most cowardly and infamous of +men!" + +The detective reflected. + +"There is one thing," said he, "that I can't explain. Why was it that +these two, who execrated each other, and whom the implacable will of +their victim chained together despite themselves, did not separate of +one accord the day after their marriage, when they had fulfilled the +condition which had established their crime?" + +The old justice of the peace shook his head. + +"I see," he answered, "that I have not yet made you understand Bertha's +resolute character. Hector would have been delighted with a separation; +his wife could not consent to it. Ah, Sauvresy knew her well! She saw +her life ruined, a horrible remorse lacerated her; she must have a +victim upon whom to expiate her errors and crimes; this victim was +Hector. Ravenous for her prey, she would not let him go for anything in +the world." + +"I' faith," observed Dr. Gendron, "your Tremorel was a chicken-hearted +wretch. What had he to fear when Sauvresy's manuscript was once +destroyed?" + +"Who told you it had been destroyed?" interrupted M. Plantat. + +M. Lecoq at this stopped promenading up and down the room, and sat down +opposite M. Plantat. + +"The whole case lies there," said he. "Whether these proofs have or have +not been destroyed." + +M. Plantat did not choose to answer directly. + +"Do you know," asked he, "to whom Sauvresy confided them for keeping?" + +"Ah," cried the detective, as if a sudden idea had enlightened him, "it +was you." + +He added to himself, "Now, my good man, I begin to see where all your +information comes from." + +"Yes, it was I," resumed M. Plantat. "On the day of the marriage of +Madame Sauvresy and Count Hector, in conformity with the last wishes of +my dying friend, I went to Valfeuillu and asked to see Monsieur and +Madame de Tremorel. Although they were full of company, they received me +at once in the little room on the ground-floor where Sauvresy was +murdered. They were both very pale and terribly troubled. They evidently +guessed the purpose of my visit, for they lost no time in admitting me +to an interview. After saluting them I addressed myself to Bertha, being +enjoined to do so by the written instructions I had received; this was +another instance of Sauvresy's foresight. 'Madame,' said I, 'I was +charged by your late husband to hand to you, on the day of your second +marriage, this package, which he confided to my care.' She took the +package, in which the bottle and the manuscript were enclosed, with a +smiling, even joyous air, thanked me warmly, and went out. The count's +expression instantly changed; he appeared very restless and agitated; he +seemed to be on coals. I saw well enough that he burned to rush after +his wife, but dared not; I was going to retire; but he stopped me. +'Pardon me,' said he, abruptly, 'you will permit me, will you not? I +will return immediately,' with which he ran out. When I saw him and his +wife a few minutes afterward, they were both very red; their eyes had a +strange expression and their voices trembled, as they accompanied me to +the door. They had certainly been having a violent altercation." + +"The rest may be conjectured," interrupted M. Lecoq. "She had gone to +secrete the manuscript in some safe place; and when her new husband +asked her to give it up to him, she replied, 'Look for it.'" + +"Sauvresy had enjoined on me to give it only into her hands." + +"Oh, he knew how to work his revenge. He had it given to his wife so +that she might hold a terrible arm against Tremorel, all ready to crush +him. If he revolted, she always had this instrument of torture at hand. +Ah, the man was a miserable wretch, and she must have made him suffer +terribly." + +"Yes," said Dr. Gendron, "up to the very day he killed her." + +The detective had resumed his promenade up and down the library. + +"The question as to the poison," said he, "remains. It is a simple one +to resolve, because we've got the man who sold it to her in that +closet." + +"Besides," returned the doctor, "I can tell something about the poison. +This rascal of a Robelot stole it from my laboratory, and I know only +too well what it is, even if the symptoms, so well described by our +friend Plantat, had not indicated its name to me. I was at work upon +aconite when Sauvresy died; and he was poisoned with aconitine." + +"Ah, with aconitine," said M. Lecoq, surprised. "It's the first time +that I ever met with that poison. Is it a new thing?" + +"Not exactly. Medea is said to have extracted her deadliest poisons from +aconite, and it was employed in Rome and Greece in criminal executions." + +"And I did not know of it! But I have very little time to study. +Besides, this poison of Medea's was perhaps lost, as was that of the +Borgias; so many of these things are!" + +"No, it was not lost, be assured. But we only know of it nowadays by +Mathiole's experiments on felons sentenced to death, in the sixteenth +century; by Hers, who isolated the active principle, the alkaloid, in +1833 and lastly by certain experiments made by Bouchardat, who +pretends--" + +Unfortunately, when Dr. Gendron was set agoing on poisons, it was +difficult to stop him; but M. Lecoq, on the other hand, never lost sight +of the end he had in view. + +"Pardon me for interrupting you, Doctor," said he. "But would traces of +aconitine be found in a body which had been two years buried? For +Monsieur Domini is going to order the exhumation of Sauvresy." + +"The tests of aconitine are not sufficiently well known to permit of the +isolation of it in a body. Bouchardat tried ioduret of potassium, but +his experiment was not successful." + +"The deuce!" said M. Lecoq. "That's annoying." + +The doctor smiled benignly. + +"Reassure yourself," said he. "No such process was in existence--so I +invented one." + +"Ah," cried Plantat. "Your sensitive paper!" + +"Precisely." + +"And could you find aconitine in Sauvresy's body?" + +"Undoubtedly." + +M. Lecoq was radiant, as if he were now certain of fulfilling what had +seemed to him a very difficult task. + +"Very well," said he. "Our inquest seems to be complete. The history of +the victims imparted to us by Monsieur Plantat gives us the key to all +the events which have followed the unhappy Sauvresy's death. Thus, the +hatred of this pair, who were in appearance so united, is explained; and +it is also clear why Hector has ruined a charming young girl with a +splendid dowry, instead of making her his wife. There is nothing +surprising in Tremorel's casting aside his name and personality to +reappear under another guise; he killed his wife because he was +constrained to do so by the logic of events. He could not fly while she +was alive, and yet he could not continue to live at Valfeuillu. And +above all, the paper for which he searched with such desperation, when +every moment was an affair of life and death to him, was none other than +Sauvresy's manuscript, his condemnation and the proof of his first +crime." + +M. Lecoq talked eagerly, as if he had a personal animosity against the +Count de Tremorel; such was his nature; and he always avowed laughingly +that he could not help having a grudge against the criminals whom he +pursued. There was an account to settle between him and them; hence the +ardor of his pursuit. Perhaps it was a simple matter of instinct with +him, like that which impels the hunting hound on the track of his game. + +"It is clear enough now," he went on, "that it was Mademoiselle Courtois +who put an end to his hesitation and eternal delay. His passion for her, +irritated by obstacles, goaded him to delirium. On learning her +condition, he lost his head and forgot all prudence and reason. He was +wearied, too, of a punishment which began anew each morning; he saw +himself lost, and his wife sacrificing herself for the malignant +pleasure of sacrificing him. Terrified, he took the resolution to commit +this murder." + +Many of the circumstances which had established M. Lecoq's conviction +had escaped Dr. Gendron. + +"What!" cried he, stupefied. "Do you believe in Mademoiselle Laurence's +complicity?" + +The detective earnestly protested by a gesture. + +"No, Doctor, certainly not; heaven forbid that I should have such an +idea. Mademoiselle Courtois was and is still ignorant of this crime. But +she knew that Tremorel would abandon his wife for her. This flight had +been discussed, planned, and agreed upon between them; they made an +appointment to meet at a certain place, on a certain day." + +"But this letter," said the doctor. + +M. Plantat could scarcely conceal his emotion when Laurence was being +talked about. + +"This letter," cried he, "which has plunged her family into the deepest +grief, and which will perhaps kill poor Courtois, is only one more scene +of the infamous drama which the count has planned." + +"Oh," said the doctor, "is it possible?" + +"I am firmly of Monsieur Plantat's opinion," said the detective. "Last +evening we had the same suspicion at the same moment at the mayor's. I +read and re-read her letter, and could have sworn that it did not +emanate from herself. The count gave her a rough draft from which she +copied it. We mustn't deceive ourselves; this letter was meditated, +pondered on, and composed at leisure. Those were not the expressions of +an unhappy young girl of twenty who was going to kill herself to escape +dishonor." + +"Perhaps you are right," remarked the doctor visibly moved. "But how can +you imagine that Tremorel succeeded in persuading her to do this +wretched act?" + +"How? See here, Doctor, I am not much experienced in such things, having +seldom had occasion to study the characters of well-brought-up young +girls; yet it seems to me very simple. Mademoiselle Courtois saw the +time coming when her disgrace would be public, and so prepared for it, +and was even ready to die if necessary." + +M. Plantat shuddered; a conversation which he had had with Laurence +occurred to him. She had asked him, he remembered, about certain +poisonous plants which he was cultivating, and had been anxious to know +how the poisonous juices could be extracted from them. + +"Yes," said he, "she has thought of dying." + +"Well," resumed the detective, "the count took her in one of the moods +when these sad thoughts haunted the poor girl, and was easily able to +complete his work of ruin. She undoubtedly told him that she preferred +death to shame, and he proved to her that, being in the condition in +which she was, she had no right to kill herself. He said that he was +very unhappy; and that not being free, he could not repair his fault; +but he offered to sacrifice his life for her. What should she do to save +both of them? Abandon her parents, make them believe that she had +committed suicide, while he, on his side, would desert his house and his +wife. Doubtless she resisted for awhile; but she finally consented to +everything; she fled, and copied and posted the infamous letter dictated +by her lover." + +The doctor was convinced. + +"Yes," he muttered, "those are doubtless the means he employed." + +"But what an idiot he was," resumed M. Lecoq, "not to perceive that the +strange coincidence between his disappearance and Laurence's suicide +would be remarked! He said to himself, 'Probably people will think that +I, as well as my wife, have been murdered; and the law, having its +victim in Guespin, will not look for any other.'" + +M. Plantat made a gesture of impotent rage. + +"Ah," cried he, "and we know not where the wretch has hid himself and +Laurence." + +The detective took him by the arm and pressed it. + +"Reassure yourself," said he, coolly. "We'll find him, or my name's not +Lecoq; and to be honest, I must say that our task does not seem to me a +difficult one." + +Several timid knocks at the door interrupted the speaker. It was late, +and the household was already awake and about. Mme. Petit in her anxiety +and curiosity had put her ear to the key-hole at least ten times, but in +vain. + +"What can they be up to in there?" said she to Louis. "Here they've been +shut up these twelve hours without eating or drinking. At all events +I'll get breakfast." + +It was not Mme. Petit, however, who dared to knock on the door; but +Louis, the gardener, who came to tell his master of the ravages which +had been made in his flower-pots and shrubs. At the same time he brought +in certain singular articles which he had picked up on the sward, and +which M. Lecoq recognized at once. + +"Heavens!" cried he, "I forgot myself. Here I go on quietly talking with +my face exposed, as if it was not broad daylight; and people might come +in at any moment!" And turning to Louis, who was very much surprised to +see this dark young man whom he had certainly not admitted the night +before, he added: + +"Give me those little toilet articles, my good fellow; they belong to +me." + +Then, by a turn of his hand, he readjusted his physiognomy of last +night, while the master of the house went out to give some orders, which +M. Lecoq did so deftly, that when M. Plantat returned, he could scarcely +believe his eyes. + +They sat down to breakfast and ate their meal as silently as they had +done the dinner of the evening before, losing no time about it. They +appreciated the value of the passing moments; M. Domini was waiting for +them at Corbeil, and was doubtless getting impatient at their delay. + +Louis had just placed a sumptuous dish of fruit upon the table, when it +occurred to M. Lecoq that Robelot was still shut up in the closet. + +"Probably the rascal needs something," said he. + +M. Plantat wished to send his servant to him; but M. Lecoq objected. + +"He's a dangerous rogue," said he. "I'll go myself." + +He went out, but almost instantly his voice was heard: + +"Messieurs! Messieurs, see here!" + +The doctor and M. Plantat hastened into the library. + +Across the threshold of the closet was stretched the body of the +bone-setter. He had killed himself. + + + + +XXII + + +Robelot must have had rare presence of mind and courage to kill himself +in that obscure closet, without making enough noise to arouse the +attention of those in the library. He had wound a string tightly around +his neck, and had used a piece of pencil as a twister, and so had +strangled himself. He did not, however, betray the hideous look which +the popular belief attributes to those who have died by strangulation. +His face was pale, his eyes and mouth half open, and he had the +appearance of one who has gradually and without much pain lost his +consciousness by congestion of the brain. + +"Perhaps he is not quite dead yet," said the doctor. He quickly pulled +out his case of instruments and knelt beside the motionless body. + +This incident seemed to annoy M. Lecoq very much; just as everything +was, as he said, "running on wheels," his principal witness, whom he had +caught at the peril of his life, had escaped him. M. Plantat, on the +contrary, seemed tolerably well satisfied, as if the death of Robelot +furthered projects which he was secretly nourishing, and fulfilled his +secret hopes. Besides, it little mattered if the object was to oppose M. +Domini's theories and induce him to change his opinion. This corpse had +more eloquence in it than the most explicit of confessions. + +The doctor, seeing the uselessness of his pains, got up. + +"It's all over," said he. "The asphyxia was accomplished in a very few +moments." + +The bone-setter's body was carefully laid on the floor in the library. + +"There is nothing more to be done," said M. Plantat, "but to carry him +home; we will follow on so as to seal up his effects, which perhaps +contain important papers. Run to the mairie," he added, turning to his +servant, "and get a litter and two stout men." + +Dr. Gendron's presence being no longer necessary, he promised M. Plantat +to rejoin him at Robelot's, and started off to inquire after M. +Courtois's condition. + +Louis lost no time, and soon reappeared followed, not by two, but ten +men. The body was placed on a litter and carried away. Robelot occupied +a little house of three rooms, where he lived by himself; one of the +rooms served as a shop, and was full of plants, dried herbs, grain, and +other articles appertaining to his vocation as an herbist. He slept in +the back room, which was better furnished than most country rooms. His +body was placed upon the bed. Among the men who had brought it was the +"drummer of the town," who was at the same time the grave-digger. This +man, expert in everything pertaining to funerals, gave all the necessary +instructions on the present occasion, himself taking part in the +lugubrious task. + +Meanwhile M. Plantat examined the furniture, the keys of which had been +taken from the deceased's pocket. The value of the property found in the +possession of this man, who had, two years before, lived from day to day +on what he could pick up, were an over-whelming proof against him in +addition to the others already discovered. But M. Plantat looked in vain +for any new indications of which he was ignorant. He found deeds of the +Morin property and of the Frapesle and Peyron lands; there were also two +bonds, for one hundred and fifty and eight hundred and twenty francs, +signed by two Orcival citizens in Robelot's favor. M. Plantat could +scarcely conceal his disappointment. + +"Nothing of importance," whispered he in M. Lecoq's ear. "How do you +explain that?" + +"Perfectly," responded the detective. "He was a sly rogue, this Robelot, +and he was cunning enough to conceal his sudden fortune and patient +enough to appear to be years accumulating it. You only find in his +secretary effects which he thought he could avow without danger. How +much is there in all?" + +Plantat rapidly added up the different sums, and said: + +"About fourteen thousand five hundred francs." + +"Madame Sauvresy gave him more than that," said the detective, +positively. "If he had no more than this, he would not have been such a +fool as to put it all into land. He must have a hoard of money concealed +somewhere." + +"Of course he must. But where?" + +"Ah, let me look." + +He began to rummage about, peering into everything in the room, moving +the furniture, sounding the floor with his heels, and rapping on the +wall here and there. Finally he came to the fireplace, before which he +stopped. + +"This is July," said he. "And yet there are cinders here in the +fireplace." + +"People sometimes neglect to clean them out in the spring." + +"True; but are not these very clean and distinct? I don't find any of +the light dust and soot on them which ought to be there after they have +lain several months." + +He went into the second room whither he had sent the men after they had +completed their task, and said: + +"I wish one of you would get me a pickaxe." + +All the men rushed out; M. Lecoq returned to his companion. + +"Surely," muttered he, as if apart, "these cinders have been disturbed +recently, and if they have been--" + +He knelt down, and pushing the cinders away, laid bare the stones of the +fireplace. Then taking a thin piece of wood, he easily inserted it into +the cracks between the stones. + +"See here, Monsieur Plantat," said he. "There is no cement between these +stones, and they are movable; the treasure must be here." + +When the pickaxe was brought, he gave a single blow with it; the stones +gaped apart, and betrayed a wide and deep hole between them. + +"Ah," cried he, with a triumphant air, "I knew it well enough." + +The hole was full of rouleaux of twenty-franc pieces; on counting them, +M. Lecoq found that there were nineteen thousand five hundred francs. + +The old justice's face betrayed an expression of profound grief. + +"That," thought he, "is the price of my poor Sauvresy's life." + +M. Lecoq found a small piece of paper, covered with figures, deposited +with the gold; it seemed to be Robelot's accounts. He had put on the +left hand the sum of forty thousand francs; on the right hand, various +sums were inscribed, the total of which was twenty-one thousand five +hundred francs. It was only too clear; Mme. Sauvresy had paid Robelot +forty thousand francs for the bottle of poison. There was nothing more +to learn at his house. They locked the money up in the secretary, and +affixed seals everywhere, leaving two men on guard. + +But M. Lecoq was not quite satisfied yet. What was the manuscript which +Plantat had read? At first he had thought that it was simply a copy of +the papers confided to him by Sauvresy; but it could not be that; +Sauvresy couldn't have thus described the last agonizing scenes of his +life. This mystery mightily worried the detective and dampened the joy +he felt at having solved the crime at Valfeuillu. He made one more +attempt to surprise Plantat into satisfying his curiosity. Taking him by +the coat-lapel, he drew him into the embrasure of a window, and with his +most innocent air, said: + +"I beg your pardon, are we going back to your house?" + +"Why should we? You know the doctor is going to meet us here." + +"I think we may need the papers you read to us, to convince Monsieur +Domini." + +M. Plantat smiled sadly, and looking steadily at him, replied: + +"You are very sly, Monsieur Lecoq; but I too am sly enough to keep the +last key of the mystery of which you hold all the others." + +"Believe me--" stammered M. Lecoq. + +"I believe," interrupted his companion, "that you would like very well +to know the source of my information. Your memory is too good for you to +forget that when I began last evening I told you that this narrative was +for your ear alone, and that I had only one object in disclosing it--to +aid our search. Why should you wish the judge of instruction to see +these notes, which are purely personal, and have no legal or authentic +character?" + +He reflected a few moments, and added: + +"I have too much confidence in you, Monsieur Lecoq, and esteem you too +much, not to have every trust that you will not divulge these strict +confidences. What you will say will be of as much weight as anything I +might divulge--especially now that you have Robelot's body to back your +assertions, as well as the money found in his possession. If Monsieur +Domini still hesitates to believe you, you know that the doctor promises +to find the poison which killed Sauvresy." + +M. Plantat stopped and hesitated. + +"In short," he resumed, "I think you will be able to keep silence as to +what you have heard from me." + +M. Lecoq took him by the hand, and pressing it significantly, said: + +"Count on me, Monsieur." + +At this moment Dr. Gendron appeared at the door. + +"Courtois is better," said he. "He weeps like a child; but he will come +out of it." + +"Heaven be praised!" cried the old justice of the peace. "Now, since +you've come, let us hurry off to Corbeil; Monsieur Domini, who is +waiting for us this morning, must be mad with impatience." + + + + +XXIII + + +M. Plantat, in speaking of M. Domini's impatience, did not exaggerate +the truth. That personage was furious; he could not comprehend the +reason of the prolonged absence of his three fellow-workers of the +previous evening. He had installed himself early in the morning in his +cabinet, at the court-house, enveloped in his judicial robe; and he +counted the minutes as they passed. His reflections during the night, +far from shaking, had only confirmed his opinion. As he receded from the +period of the crime, he found it very simple and natural--indeed, the +easiest thing in the world to account for. He was annoyed that the rest +did not share his convictions, and he awaited their report in a state of +irritation which his clerk only too well perceived. He had eaten his +breakfast in his cabinet, so as to be sure and be beforehand with M. +Lecoq. It was a useless precaution; for the hours passed on and no one +arrived. + +To kill time, he sent for Guespin and Bertaud and questioned them anew, +but learned nothing more than he had extracted from them the night +before. One of the prisoners swore by all things sacred that he knew +nothing except what he had already told; the other preserved an +obstinate and ferocious silence, confining himself to the remark: "I +know that I am lost; do with me what you please." + +M. Domini was just going to send a mounted gendarme to Orcival to find +out the cause of the delay, when those whom he awaited were announced. +He quickly gave the order to admit them, and so keen was his curiosity, +despite what he called his dignity, that he got up and went forward to +meet them. + +"How late you are!" said he. + +"And yet we haven't lost a minute," replied M. Plantat. "We haven't even +been in bed." + +"There is news, then? Has the count's body been found?" + +"There is much news, Monsieur," said M. Lecoq. "But the count's body has +not been found, and I dare even say that it will not be found--for the +very simple fact that he has not been killed. The reason is that he was +not one of the victims, as at first supposed, but the assassin." + +At this distinct declaration on M. Lecoq's part, the judge started in +his seat. + +"Why, this is folly!" cried he. + +M. Lecoq never smiled in a magistrate's presence. "I do not think so," +said he, coolly; "I am persuaded that if Monsieur Domini will grant me +his attention for half an hour I will have the honor of persuading him +to share my opinion." + +M. Domini's slight shrug of the shoulders did not escape the detective, +but he calmly continued: + +"More; I am sure that Monsieur Domini will not permit me to leave his +cabinet without a warrant to arrest Count Hector de Tremorel, whom at +present he thinks to be dead." + +"Possibly," said M. Domini. "Proceed." + +M. Lecoq then rapidly detailed the facts gathered by himself and M. +Plantat from the beginning of the inquest. He narrated them not as if he +had guessed or been told of them, but in their order of time and in such +a manner that each new incident which, he mentioned followed naturally +from the preceding one. He had completely resumed his character of a +retired haberdasher, with a little piping voice, and such obsequious +expressions as, "I have the honor," and "If Monsieur the Judge will +deign to permit me;" he resorted to the candy-box with the portrait, +and, as the night before at Valfeuillu, chewed a lozenge when he came to +the more striking points. M. Domini's surprise increased every minute as +he proceeded; while at times, exclamations of astonishment passed his +lips: "Is it possible?" "That is hard to believe!" + +M. Lecoq finished his recital; he tranquilly munched a lozenge, and +added: + +"What does Monsieur the Judge of Instruction think now?" + +M. Domini was fain to confess that he was almost satisfied. A man, +however, never permits an opinion deliberately and carefully formed to +be refuted by one whom he looks on as an inferior, without a secret +chagrin. But in this case the evidence was too abundant, and too +positive to be resisted. + +"I am convinced," said he, "that a crime was committed on Monsieur +Sauvresy with the dearly paid assistance of this Robelot. To-morrow I +shall give instructions to Doctor Gendron to proceed at once to an +exhumation and autopsy of the late master of Valfeuillu." + +"And you may be sure that I shall find the poison," chimed in the +doctor. + +"Very well," resumed M. Domini. "But does it necessarily follow that +because Monsieur Tremorel poisoned his friend to marry his widow, he +yesterday killed his wife and then fled? I don't think so." + +"Pardon me," objected Lecoq, gently. "It seems to me that Mademoiselle +Courtois's supposed suicide proves at least something." + +"That needs clearing up. This coincidence can only be a matter of pure +chance." + +"But I am sure that Monsieur Tremorel shaved himself--of that we have +proof; then, we did not find the boots which, according to the valet, he +put on the morning of the murder." + +"Softly, softly," interrupted the judge. "I don't pretend that you are +absolutely wrong; it must be as you say; only I give you my objections. +Let us admit that Tremorel killed his wife, that he fled and is alive. +Does that clear Guespin, and show that he took no part in the murder?" + +This was evidently the flaw in Lecoq's case; but being convinced of +Hector's guilt, he had given little heed to the poor gardener, thinking +that his innocence would appear of itself when the real criminal was +arrested. He was about to reply, when footsteps and voices were heard in +the corridor. + +"Stop," said M. Domini. "Doubtless we shall now hear something important +about Guespin." + +"Are you expecting some new witness?" asked M. Plantat. + +"No; I expect one of the Corbeil police to whom I have given an +important mission." + +"Regarding Guespin?" + +"Yes. Very early this morning a young working-woman of the town, whom +Guespin has been courting, brought me an excellent photograph of him. I +gave this portrait to the agent with instructions to go to the Vulcan's +Forges and ascertain if Guespin had been seen there, and whether he +bought anything there night before last." + +M. Lecoq was inclined to be jealous; the judge's proceeding ruffled him, +and he could not conceal an expressive grimace. + +"I am truly grieved," said he, dryly, "that Monsieur the Judge has so +little confidence in me that he thinks it necessary to give me +assistance." + +This sensitiveness aroused M. Domini, who replied: + +"Eh! my dear man, you can't be everywhere at once. I think you very +shrewd, but you were not here, and I was in a hurry." + +"A false step is often irreparable." + +"Make yourself easy; I've sent an intelligent man." At this moment the +door opened, and the policeman referred to by the judge appeared on the +threshold. He was a muscular man about forty years old, with a military +pose, a heavy mustache, and thick brows, meeting over the nose. He had a +sly rather than a shrewd expression, so that his appearance alone seemed +to awake all sorts of suspicions and put one instinctively on his guard. + +"Good news!" said he in a big voice: "I didn't make the journey to Paris +for the King of Prussia; we are right on the track of this rogue of a +Guespin." + +M. Domini encouraged him with an approving gesture. + +"See here, Goulard," said he, "let us go on in order if we can. You went +then, according to my instructions, to the Vulcan's Forges?" + +"At once, Monsieur." + +"Precisely. Had they seen the prisoner there?" + +"Yes; on the evening of Wednesday, July 8th." + +"At what hour?" + +"About ten o'clock, a few minutes before they shut up; so that he was +remarked, and the more distinctly observed." + +The judge moved his lips as if to make an objection, but was stopped by +a gesture from M. Lecoq. + +"And who recognized the photograph?" + +"Three of the clerks. Guespin's manner first attracted their attention. +It was strange, so they said, and they thought he was drunk, or at least +tipsy. Then their recollection was fixed by his talking very fast, +saying that he was going to patronize them a great deal, and that if +they would make a reduction in their prices he would procure for them +the custom of an establishment whose confidence he possessed, the Gentil +Jardinier, which bought a great many gardening tools." + +M. Domini interrupted the examination to consult some papers which lay +before him on his desk. It was, he found, the Gentil Jardinier which had +procured Guespin his place in Tremorel's household. The judge remarked +this aloud, and added: + +"The question of identity seems to be settled. Guespin was undoubtedly +at the Vulcan's Forges on Wednesday night." + +"So much the better for him," M. Lecoq could not help muttering. + +The judge heard him, but though the remark seemed singular to him he did +not notice it, and went on questioning the agent. + +"Well, did they tell you what Guespin went there to obtain?" + +"The clerks recollected it perfectly. He first bought a hammer, a cold +chisel, and a file." + +"I knew it," exclaimed the judge. "And then?" + +"Then--" + +Here the man, ambitious to make a sensation among his hearers, rolled +his eyes tragically, and in a dramatic tone, added: + +"Then he bought a dirk knife!" + +The judge felt that he was triumphing over M. Lecoq. + +"Well," said he to the detective in his most ironical tone, "what do you +think of your friend now? What do you say to this honest and worthy +young man, who, on the very night of the crime, leaves a wedding where +he would have had a good time, to go and buy a hammer, a chisel, and a +dirk--everything, in short, used in the murder and the mutilation of the +body?" + +Dr. Gendron seemed a little disconcerted at this, but a sly smile +overspread M. Plantat's face. As for M. Lecoq, he had the air of one who +is shocked by objections which he knows he ought to annihilate by a +word, and yet who is fain to be resigned to waste time in useless talk, +which he might put to great profit. + +"I think, Monsieur," said he, very humbly, "that the murderers at +Valfeuillu did not use either a hammer or a chisel, or a file, and that +they brought no instrument at all from outside--since they used a +hammer." + +"And didn't they have a dirk besides?" asked the judge in a bantering +tone, confident that he was on the right path. + +"That is another question, I confess; but it is a difficult one to +answer." + +He began to lose patience. He turned toward the Corbeil policeman, and +abruptly asked him: + +"Is this all you know?" + +The big man with the thick eyebrows superciliously eyed this little +Parisian who dared to question him thus. He hesitated so long that M. +Lecoq, more rudely than before, repeated his question. + +"Yes, that's all," said Goulard at last, "and I think it's sufficient; +the judge thinks so too; and he is the only person who gives me orders, +and whose approbation I wish for." + +M. Lecoq shrugged his shoulders, and proceeded: + +"Let's see; did you ask what was the shape of the dirk bought by +Guespin? Was it long or short, wide or narrow?" + +"Faith, no. What was the use?" + +"Simply, my brave fellow, to compare this weapon with the victim's +wounds, and to see whether its handle corresponds to that which left a +distinct and visible imprint between the victim's shoulders." + +"I forgot it; but it is easily remedied." + +"An oversight may, of course, be pardoned; but you can at least tell us +in what sort of money Guespin paid for his purchases?" + +The poor man seemed so embarrassed, humiliated, and vexed, that the +judge hastened to his assistance. + +"The money is of little consequence, it seems to me," said he. + +"I beg you to excuse me I don't agree with you," returned M. Lecoq. +"This matter may be a very grave one. What is the most serious evidence +against Guespin? The money found in his pocket. Let us suppose for a +moment that night before last, at ten o'clock, he changed a +one-thousand-franc note in Paris. Could the obtaining of that note have +been the motive of the crime at Valfeuillu? No, for up to that hour the +crime had not been committed. Where could it have come from? That is no +concern of mine, at present. But if my theory is correct, justice will +be forced to agree that the several hundred francs found in Guespin's +possession can and must be the change for the note." + +"That is only a theory," urged M. Domini in an irritated tone. + +"That is true; but one which may turn out a certainty. It remains for me +to ask this man how Guespin carried away the articles which he bought? +Did he simply slip them into his pocket, or did he have them done up in +a bundle, and if so, how?" + +The detective spoke in a sharp, hard, freezing tone, with a bitter +raillery in it, frightening his Corbeil colleague out of his assurance. + +"I don't know," stammered the latter. "They didn't tell me--I thought--" + +M. Lecoq raised his hands as if to call the heavens to witness: in his +heart, he was charmed with this fine occasion to revenge himself for M. +Domini's disdain. He could not, dared not say anything to the judge; but +he had the right to banter the agent and visit his wrath upon him. + +"Ah so, my lad," said he, "what did you go to Paris for? To show +Guespin's picture and detail the crime to the people at Vulcan's Forges? +They ought to be very grateful to you; but Madame Petit, Monsieur +Plantat's housekeeper, would have done as much." + +At this stroke the man began to get angry; he frowned, and in his +bluffest tone, began: + +"Look here now, you--" + +"Ta, ta, ta," interrupted M. Lecoq. "Let me alone, and know who is +talking to you. I am Monsieur Lecoq." + +The effect of the famous detective's name on his antagonist was magical. +He naturally laid down his arms and surrendered, straightway becoming +respectful and obsequious. It almost flattered him to be roughly handled +by such a celebrity. He muttered, in an abashed and admiring tone: + +"What, is it possible? You, Monsieur Lecoq!" + +"Yes, it is I, young man; but console yourself; I bear no grudge against +you. You don't know your trade, but you have done me a service and you +have brought us a convincing proof of Guespin's innocence." + +M. Domini looked on at this scene with secret chagrin. His recruit went +over to the enemy, yielding without a struggle to a confessed +superiority. M. Lecoq's presumption, in speaking of a prisoner's +innocence whose guilt seemed to the judge indisputable, exasperated him. + +"And what is this tremendous proof, if you please?" asked he. + +"It is simple and striking," answered M. Lecoq, putting on his most +frivolous air as his conclusions narrowed the field of probabilities. + +"You doubtless recollect that when we were at Valfeuillu we found the +hands of the clock in the bedroom stopped at twenty minutes past three. +Distrusting foul play, I put the striking apparatus in motion--do you +recall it? What happened? The clock struck eleven. That convinced us +that the crime was committed before that hour. But don't you see that if +Guespin was at the Vulcan's Forges at ten he could not have got back to +Valfeuillu before midnight? Therefore it was not--he who did the deed." + +The detective, as he came to this conclusion, pulled out the inevitable +box and helped himself to a lozenge, at the same time bestowing upon the +judge a smile which said: + +"Get out of that, if you can." + +The judge's whole theory tumbled to pieces if M. Lecoq's deductions were +right; but he could not admit that he had been so much deceived; he +could not renounce an opinion formed by deliberate reflection. + +"I don't pretend that Guespin is the only criminal," said he. "He could +only have been an accomplice; and that he was." + +"An accomplice? No, Judge, he was a victim. Ah, Tremorel is a great +rascal! Don't you see now why he put forward the hands? At first I +didn't perceive the object of advancing the time five hours; now it is +clear. In order to implicate Guespin the crime must appear to have been +committed after midnight, and--" + +He suddenly checked himself and stopped with open mouth and fixed eyes +as a new idea crossed his mind. The judge, who was bending over his +papers trying to find something to sustain his position, did not +perceive this. + +"But then," said the latter, "how do you explain Guespin's refusal to +speak and to give an account of where he spent the night?" + +M. Lecoq had now recovered from his emotion, and Dr. Gendron and M. +Plantat, who were watching him with the deepest attention, saw a +triumphant light in his eyes. Doubtless he had just found a solution of +the problem which had been put to him. + +"I understand," replied he, "and can explain Guespin's obstinate +silence. I should be perfectly amazed if he decided to speak just now." + +M. Domini misconstrued the meaning of this; he thought he saw in it a +covert intention to banter him. + +"He has had a night to reflect upon it," he answered. "Is not twelve +hours enough to mature a system of defence?" + +The detective shook his head doubtfully. + +"It is certain that he does not need it," said he. "Our prisoner doesn't +trouble himself about a system of defence, that I'll swear to." + +"He keeps quiet, because he hasn't been able to get up a plausible +story." + +"No, no; believe me, he isn't trying to get up one. In my opinion, +Guespin is a victim; that is, I suspect Tremorel of having set an +infamous trap for him, into which he has fallen, and in which he sees +himself so completely caught that he thinks it useless to struggle. The +poor wretch is convinced that the more he resists the more surely he +will tighten the web that is woven around him." + +"I think so, too," said M. Plantat. + +"The true criminal, Count Hector," resumed the detective, "lost his +presence of mind at the last moment, and thus lost all the advantages +which his previous caution had gained. Don't let us forget that he is an +able man, perfidious enough to mature the most infamous stratagems, and +unscrupulous enough to execute them. He knows that justice must have its +victims, one for every crime; he does not forget that the police, as +long as it has not the criminal, is always on the search with eye and +ear open; and he has thrown us Guespin as a huntsman, closely pressed, +throws his glove to the bear that is close upon him. Perhaps he thought +that the innocent man would not be in danger of his life; at all events +he hoped to gain time by this ruse; while the bear is smelling and +turning over the glove, the huntsman gains ground, escapes and reaches +his place of refuge; that was what Tremorel proposed to do." + +The Corbeil policeman was now undoubtedly Lecoq's most enthusiastic +listener. Goulard literally drank in his chief's words. He had never +heard any of his colleagues express themselves with such fervor and +authority; he had had no idea of such eloquence, and he stood erect, as +if some of the admiration which he saw in all the faces were reflected +back on him. He grew in his own esteem as he thought that he was a +soldier in an army commanded by such generals. He had no longer any +opinion excepting that of his superior. It was not so easy to persuade, +subjugate, and convince the judge. + +"But," objected the latter, "you saw Guespin's countenance?" + +"Ah, what matters the countenance--what does that prove? Don't we know +if you and I were arrested to-morrow on a terrible charge, what our +bearing would be?" + +M. Domini gave a significant start; this hypothesis scarcely pleased +him. + +"And yet you and I are familiar with the machinery of justice. When I +arrested Lanscot, the poor servant in the Rue Marignan, his first words +were: 'Come on, my account is good.' The morning that Papa Tabaret and I +took the Viscount de Commarin as he was getting out of bed, on the +accusation of having murdered the widow Lerouge, he cried: 'I am lost.' +Yet neither of them were guilty; but both of them, the viscount and the +valet, equal before the terror of a possible mistake of justice, and +running over in their thoughts the charges which would be brought +against them, had a moment of overwhelming discouragement." + +"But such discouragement does not last two days," said M. Domini. + +M. Lecoq did not answer this; he went on, growing more animated as he +proceeded. + +"You and I have seen enough prisoners to know how deceitful appearances +are, and how little they are to be trusted. It would be foolish to base +a theory upon a prisoner's bearing. He who talked about 'the cry of +innocence' was an idiot, just as the man was who prated about the 'pale +stupor' of guilt. Neither crime nor virtue have, unhappily, any especial +countenance. The Simon girl, who was accused of having killed her +father, absolutely refused to answer any questions for twenty-two days; +on the twenty-third, the murderer was caught. As to the Sylvain +affair--" + +M. Domini rapped lightly on his desk to check the detective. As a man, +the judge held too obstinately to his opinions; as a magistrate he was +equally obstinate, but was at the same time ready to make any sacrifice +of his self-esteem if the voice of duty prompted it. M. Lecoq's +arguments had not shaken his convictions, but they imposed on him the +duty of informing himself at once, and to either conquer the detective +or avow himself conquered. + +"You seem to be pleading," said he to M. Lecoq. "There is no need of +that here. We are not counsel and judge; the same honorable intentions +animate us both. Each, in his sphere, is searching after the truth. You +think you see it shining where I only discern clouds; and you may be +mistaken as well as I." + +Then by an act of heroism, he condescended to add: + +"What do you think I ought to do?" + +The judge was at least rewarded for the effort he made by approving +glances from M. Plantat and the doctor. But M. Lecoq did not hasten to +respond; he had many weighty reasons to advance; that, he saw, was not +what was necessary. He ought to present the facts, there and at once, +and produce one of those proofs which can be touched with the finger. +How should he do it? His active mind searched eagerly for such a proof. + +"Well?" insisted M. Domini. + +"Ah," cried the detective. "Why can't I ask Guespin two or three +questions?" + +The judge frowned; the suggestion seemed to him rather presumptuous. It +is formally laid down that the questioning of the accused should be done +in secret, and by the judge alone, aided by his clerk. On the other hand +it is decided, that after he has once been interrogated he may be +confronted with witnesses. There are, besides, exceptions in favor of +the members of the police force. M. Domini reflected whether there were +any precedents to apply to the case. + +"I don't know," he answered at last, "to what point the law permits me +to consent to what you ask. However, as I am convinced the interests of +truth outweigh all rules, I shall take it on myself to let you question +Guespin." + +He rang; a bailiff appeared. + +"Has Guespin been carried back to prison?" + +"Not yet, Monsieur." + +"So much the better; have him brought in here." + +M. Lecoq was beside himself with joy; he had not hoped to achieve such a +victory over one so determined as M. Domini. + +"He will speak now," said he, so full of confidence that his eyes shone, +and he forgot the portrait of the dear defunct, "for I have three means +of unloosening his tongue, one of which is sure to succeed. But before +he comes I should like to know one thing. Do you know whether Tremorel +saw Jenny after Sauvresy's death?" + +"Jenny?" asked M. Plantat, a little surprised. + +"Yes." + +"Certainly he did." + +"Several times?" + +"Pretty often. After the scene at the Belle Image the poor girl plunged +into terrible dissipation. Whether she was smitten with remorse, or +understood that it was her conduct which had killed Sauvresy, or +suspected the crime, I don't know. She began, however, to drink +furiously, falling lower and lower every week--" + +"And the count really consented to see her again?" + +"He was forced to do so; she tormented him, and he was afraid of her. +When she had spent all her money she sent to him for more, and he gave +it. Once he refused; and that very evening she went to him the worse for +wine, and he had the greatest difficulty in the world to send her away +again. In short, she knew what his relations with Madame Sauvresy had +been, and she threatened him; it was a regular black-mailing operation. +He told me all about the trouble she gave him, and added that he would +not be able to get rid of her without shutting her up, which he could +not bring himself to do." + +"How long ago was their last interview?" + +"Why," answered the doctor, "not three weeks ago, when I had a +consultation at Melun, I saw the count and this demoiselle at a hotel +window; when he saw me he suddenly drew back." + +"Then," said the detective, "there is no longer any doubt--" + +He stopped. Guespin came in between two gendarmes. + +The unhappy gardener had aged twenty years in twenty-four hours. His +eyes were haggard, his dry lips were bordered with foam. + +"Let us see," said the judge. "Have you changed your mind about +speaking?" + +The prisoner did not answer. + +"Have you decided to tell us about yourself?" + +Guespin's rage made him tremble from head to foot, and his eyes became +fiery. + +"Speak!" said he hoarsely. "Why should I?" + +He added with the gesture of a desperate man who abandons himself, +renounces all struggling and all hope: + +"What have I done to you, my God, that you torture me this way? What do +you want me to say? That I did this crime--is that what you want? Well, +then--yes--it was I. Now you are satisfied. Now cut my head off, and do +it quick--for I don't want to suffer any longer." + +A mournful silence welcomed Guespin's declaration. What, he confessed +it! + +M. Domini had at least the good taste not to exult; he kept still, and +yet this avowal surprised him beyond all expression. + +M. Lecoq alone, although surprised, was not absolutely put out of +countenance. He approached Guespin and tapping him on the shoulder, said +in a paternal tone: + +"Come, comrade, what you are telling us is absurd. Do you think the +judge has any secret grudge against you? No, eh? Do you suppose I am +interested to have you guillotined? Not at all. A crime has been +committed, and we are trying to find the assassin. If you are innocent, +help us to find the man who isn't: What were you doing from Wednesday +evening till Thursday morning?" + +But Guespin persisted in his ferocious and stupid obstinacy. + +"I've said what I have to say," said he. + +M. Lecoq changed his tone to one of severity, stepping back to watch the +effect he was about to produce upon Guespin. + +"You haven't any right to hold your tongue. And even if you do, you +fool, the police know everything. Your master sent you on an errand, +didn't he, on Wednesday night; what did he give you? A +one-thousand-franc note?" + +The prisoner looked at M. Lecoq in speechless amazement. + +"No," he stammered. "It was a five-hundred-franc note." + +The detective, like all great artists in a critical scene, was really +moved. His surprising genius for investigation had just inspired him +with a bold stroke, which, if it succeeded, would assure him the +victory. + +"Now," said he, "tell me the woman's name." + +"I don't know." + +"You are only a fool then. She is short, isn't she, quite pretty, brown +and pale, with very large eyes?" + +"You know her, then?" said Guespin, in a voice trembling with emotion. + +"Yes, comrade, and if you want to know her name, to put in your prayers, +she is called--Jenny." + +Men who are really able in some specialty, whatever it may be, never +uselessly abuse their superiority; their satisfaction at seeing it +recognized is sufficient reward. M. Lecoq softly enjoyed his triumph, +while his hearers wondered at his perspicacity. A rapid chain of +reasoning had shown him not only Tremorel's thoughts, but also the means +he had employed to accomplish his purpose. + +Guespin's astonishment soon changed to anger. He asked himself how this +man could have been informed of things which he had every reason to +believe were secret. Lecoq continued: + +"Since I have told you the woman's name, tell me now, how and why the +count gave you a five-hundred-franc note." + +"It was just as I was going out. The count had no change, and did not +want to send me to Orcival for it. I was to bring back the rest." + +"And why didn't you rejoin your companions at the wedding in the +Batignolles?" + +No answer. + +"What was the errand which you were to do for the count?" + +Guespin hesitated. His eyes wandered from one to another of those +present, and he seemed to discover an ironical expression on all the +faces. It occurred to him that they were making sport of him, and had +set a snare into which he had fallen. A great despair took possession of +him. + +"Ah," cried he, addressing M. Lecoq, "you have deceived me. You have +been lying so as to find out the truth. I have been such a fool as to +answer you, and you are going to turn it all against me." + +"What? Are you going to talk nonsense again?" + +"No, but I see just how it is, and you won't catch me again! Now I'd +rather die than say a word." + +The detective tried to reassure him; but he added: + +"Besides, I'm as sly as you; I've told you nothing but lies." + +This sudden whim surprised no one. Some prisoners intrench themselves +behind a system of defence, and nothing can divert them from it; others +vary with each new question, denying what they have just affirmed, and +constantly inventing some new absurdity which anon they reject again. M. +Lecoq tried in vain to draw Guespin from his silence; M. Domini made the +same attempt, and also failed; to all questions he only answered, "I +don't know." + +At last the detective waxed impatient. + +"See here," said he to Guespin, "I took you for a young man of sense, +and you are only an ass. Do you imagine that we don't know anything? +Listen: On the night of Madame Denis's wedding, you were getting ready +to go off with your comrades, and had just borrowed twenty francs from +the valet, when the count called you. He made you promise absolute +secrecy (a promise which, to do you justice, you kept); he told you to +leave the other servants at the station and go to Vulcan's Forges, where +you were to buy for him a hammer, a file, a chisel, and a dirk; these +you were to carry to a certain woman. Then he gave you this famous +five-hundred-franc note, telling you to bring him back the change when +you returned next day. Isn't that so?" + +An affirmative response glistened in the prisoner's eyes; still, he +answered, "I don't recollect it." + +"Now," pursued M. Lecoq, "I'm going to tell you what happened +afterwards. You drank something and got tipsy, and in short spent a part +of the change of the note. That explains your fright when you were +seized yesterday morning, before anybody said a word to you. You thought +you were being arrested for spending that money. Then, when you learned +that the count had been murdered during the night, recollecting that on +the evening before you had bought all kinds of instruments of theft and +murder, and that you didn't know either the address or the name of the +woman to whom you gave up the package, convinced that if you explained +the source of the money found in your pocket, you would not be +believed--then, instead of thinking of the means to prove your +innocence, you became afraid, and thought you would save yourself by +holding your tongue." + +The prisoner's countenance visibly changed; his nerves relaxed; his +tight lips fell apart; his mind opened itself to hope. But he still +resisted. + +"Do with me as you like," said he. + +"Eh! What should we do with such a fool as you?" cried M. Lecoq angrily. +"I begin to think you are a rascal too. A decent fellow would see that +we wanted to get him out of a scrape, and he'd tell us the truth. You +are prolonging your imprisonment by your own will. You'd better learn +that the greatest shrewdness consists in telling the truth. A last time, +will you answer?" + +Guespin shook his head; no. + +"Go back to prison, then; since it pleases you," concluded the +detective. He looked at the judge for his approval, and added: + +"Gendarmes, remove the prisoner." + +The judge's last doubt was dissipated like the mist before the sun. He +was, to tell the truth, a little uneasy at having treated the detective +so rudely; and he tried to repair it as much as he could. + +"You are an able man, Monsieur Lecoq," said he. "Without speaking of +your clearsightedness, which is so prompt as to seem almost like second +sight, your examination just now was a master-piece of its kind. Receive +my congratulations, to say nothing of the reward which I propose to +recommend in your favor to your chiefs." + +The detective at these compliments cast down his eyes with the abashed +air of a virgin. He looked tenderly at the dear defunct's portrait, and +doubtless said to it: + +"At last, darling, we have defeated him--this austere judge who so +heartily detests the force of which we are the brightest ornament, makes +his apologies; he recognizes and applauds our services." + +He answered aloud: + +"I can only accept half of your eulogies, Monsieur; permit me to offer +the other half to my friend Monsieur Plantat." + +M. Plantat tried to protest. + +"Oh," said he, "only for some bits of information! You would have +ferreted out the truth without me all the same." + +The judge arose and graciously, but not without effort, extended his +hand to M. Lecoq, who respectfully pressed it. + +"You have spared me," said the judge, "a great remorse. Guespin's +innocence would surely sooner or later have been recognized; but the +idea of having imprisoned an innocent man and harassed him with my +interrogatories, would have disturbed my sleep and tormented my +conscience for a long time." + +"God knows this poor Guespin is not an interesting youth," returned the +detective. "I should be disposed to press him hard were I not certain +that he's half a fool." + +M. Domini gave a start. + +"I shall discharge him this very day," said he, "this very hour." + +"It will be an act of charity," said M. Lecoq; "but confound his +obstinacy; it was so easy for him to simplify my task. I might be able, +by the aid of chance, to collect the principal facts--the errand, and a +woman being mixed up in the affair; but as I'm no magician, I couldn't +guess all the details. How is Jenny mixed up in this affair? Is she an +accomplice, or has she only been made to play an ignorant part in it? +Where did she meet Guespin and whither did she lead him? It is clear +that she made the poor fellow tipsy so as to prevent his going to the +Batignolles. Tremorel must have told her some false story--but what?" + +"I don't think Tremorel troubled his head about so small a matter," said +M. Plantat. "He gave Guespin and Jenny some task, without explaining it +at all." + +M. Lecoq reflected a moment. + +"Perhaps you are right. But Jenny must have had special orders to +prevent Guespin from putting in an alibi." + +"But," said M. Domini, "Jenny will explain it all to us." + +"That is what I rely on; and I hope that within forty-eight hours I +shall have found her and brought her safely to Corbeil." + +He rose at these words, took his cane and hat, and turning to the judge, +said: + +"Before retiring--" + +"Yes, I know," interrupted M. Domini, "you want a warrant to arrest +Hector de Tremorel." + +"I do, as you are now of my opinion that he is still alive." + +"I am sure of it." + +M. Domini opened his portfolio and wrote off a warrant as follows: + +"By the law: "We, judge of instruction of the first tribunal, etc., +considering articles 91 and 94 of the code of criminal instruction, +command and ordain to all the agents of the police to arrest, in +conformity with the law, one Hector de Tremorel, etc." + +When he had finished, he said: + +"Here it is, and may you succeed in speedily finding this great +criminal." + +"Oh, he'll find him," cried the Corbeil policeman. + +"I hope so, at least. As to how I shall go to work, I don't know yet. I +will arrange my plan of battle to-night." + +The detective then took leave of M. Domini and retired, followed by M. +Plantat. The doctor remained with the judge to make arrangements for +Sauvresy's exhumation. + +M. Lecoq was just leaving the court-house when he felt himself pulled by +the arm. He turned and found that it was Goulard who came to beg his +favor and to ask him to take him along, persuaded that after having +served under so great a captain he must inevitably become a famous man +himself. M. Lecoq had some difficulty in getting rid of him; but he at +length found himself alone in the street with the old justice of the +peace. + +"It is late," said the latter. "Would it be agreeable to you to partake +of another modest dinner with me, and accept my cordial hospitality?" + +"I am chagrined to be obliged to refuse you," replied M. Lecoq. "But I +ought to be in Paris this evening." + +"But I--in fact, I--was very anxious to talk to you--about--" + +"About Mademoiselle Laurence?" + +"Yes; I have a plan, and if you would help me--" + +M. Lecoq affectionately pressed his friend's hand. + +"I have only known you a few hours," said he, "and yet I am as devoted +to you as I would be to an old friend. All that is humanly possible for +me to do to serve you, I shall certainly do." + +"But where shall I see you? They expect me to-day at Orcival." + +"Very well; to-morrow morning at nine, at my rooms. No--Rue Montmartre." + +"A thousand thanks; I shall be there." + +When they had reached the Belle Image they separated. + + + + +XXIV + + +Nine o'clock had just struck in the belfry of the church of St. +Eustache, when M. Plantat reached Rue Montmartre, and entered the house +bearing the number which M. Lecoq had given him. + +"Monsieur Lecoq?" said he to an old woman who was engaged in getting +breakfast for three large cats which were mewing around her. The woman +scanned him with a surprised and suspicious air. M. Plantat, when he was +dressed up, had much more the appearance of a fine old gentleman than of +a country attorney; and though the detective received many visits from +all sorts of people, it was rarely that the denizens of the Faubourg +Saint Germaine rung his bell. + +"Monsieur Lecoq's apartments," answered the old woman, "are on the third +story, the door facing the stairs." + +The justice of the peace slowly ascended the narrow, ill-lighted +staircase, which in its dark corners was almost dangerous. He was +thinking of the strange step he was about to take. An idea had occurred +to him, but he did not know whether it were practicable, and at all +events he needed the aid and advice of the detective. He was forced to +disclose his most secret thoughts, as it were, to confess himself; and +his heart beat fast. The door opposite the staircase on the third story +was not like other doors; it was of plain oak, thick, without mouldings, +and fastened with iron bars. It would have looked like a prison door had +not its sombreness been lightened by a heavily colored engraving of a +cock crowing, with the legend "Always Vigilant." Had the detective put +his coat of arms up there? Was it not more likely that one of his men +had done it? After examining the door more than a minute, and hesitating +like a youth before his beloved's gate, he rang the bell. A creaking of +locks responded, and through the narrow bars of the peephole he saw the +hairy face of an old crone. + +"What do you want?" said the woman, in a deep, bass voice. + +"Monsieur Lecoq." + +"What do you want of him?" + +"He made an appointment with me for this morning." + +"Your name and business?" + +"Monsieur Plantat, justice of the peace at Orcival." + +"All right. Wait." + +The peephole was closed and the old man waited. + +"Peste!" growled he. "Everybody can't get in here, it seems." Hardly had +this reflection passed through his mind when the door opened with a +noise as of chains and locks. He entered, and the old crone, after +leading him through a dining-room whose sole furniture was a table and +six chairs, introduced him to a large room, half toilet-room and half +working-room, lighted by two windows looking on the court, and guarded +by strong, close bars. + +"If you will take the trouble to sit," said the servant, "Monsieur Lecoq +will soon be here; he is giving orders to one of his men." + +But M. Plantat did not take a seat; he preferred to examine the curious +apartment in which he found himself. The whole of one side of the wall +was taken up with a long rack, where hung the strangest and most +incongruous suits of clothes. There were costumes belonging to all +grades of society; and on some wooden pegs above, wigs of all colors +were hanging; while boots and shoes of various styles were ranged on the +floor. A toilet-table, covered with powders, essences, and paints, stood +between the fireplace and the window. On the other side of the room was +a bookcase full of scientific works, especially of physic and chemistry. +The most singular piece of furniture in the apartment, however, was a +large ball, shaped like a lozenge, in black velvet, suspended beside the +looking-glass. A quantity of pins were stuck in this ball, so as to form +the letters composing these two names: HECTOR-JENNY. + +These names glittering on the black background attracted the old man's +attention at once. This must have been M. Lecoq's reminder. The ball was +meant to recall to him perpetually the people of whom he was in pursuit. +Many names, doubtless, had in turn glittered on that velvet, for it was +much frayed and perforated. An unfinished letter lay open upon the +bureau. + +M. Plantat leaned over to read it; but he took his trouble for nothing, +for it was written in cipher. + +He had no sooner finished his inspection of the room than the noise of a +door opening made him turn round. He saw before him a man of his own +age, of respectable mien, and polite manners, a little bald, with gold +spectacles and a light-colored flannel dressing-gown. + +M. Plantat bowed, saying: + +"I am waiting here for Monsieur Lecoq." + +The man in gold spectacles burst out laughing, and clapped his hands +with glee. + +"What, dear sir," said he, "don't you know me? Look at me well--it is +I--Monsieur Lecoq!" And to convince him, he took off his spectacles. +Those might, indeed, be Lecoq's eyes, and that his voice; M. Plantat was +confounded. + +"I never should have recognized you," said he. + +"It's true, I have changed a little--but what would you have? It's my +trade." + +And pushing a chair toward his visitor, he pursued: + +"I have to beg a thousand pardons for the formalities you've had to +endure to get in here; it's a dire necessity, but one I can't help. I +have told you of the dangers to which I am exposed; they pursue me to my +very door. Why, last week a railway porter brought a package here +addressed to me. Janouille--that's my old woman--suspected nothing, +though she has a sharp nose, and told him to come in. He held out the +package, I went up to take it, when pif! paf! off went two pistol-shots. +The package was a revolver wrapped up in oilcloth, and the porter was a +convict escaped from Cayenne, caught by me last year. Ah, I put him +through for this though!" + +He told this adventure carelessly, as if it were the most natural thing +in the world. + +"But let's not starve ourselves to death," he continued, ringing the +bell. The old hag appeared, and he ordered her to bring on breakfast +forthwith, and above all, some good wine. + +"You are observing my Janouille," remarked he, seeing that M. Plantat +looked curiously at the servant. "She's a pearl, my dear friend, who +watches over me as if I were her child, and would go through the fire +for me. I had a good deal of trouble the other day to prevent her +strangling the false railway porter. I picked her out of three or four +thousand convicts. She had been convicted of infanticide and arson. I +would bet a hundred to one that, during the three years that she has +been in my service, she has not even thought of robbing me of so much as +a centime." + +But M. Plantat only listened to him with one ear; he was trying to find +an excuse for cutting Janouille's story short, and to lead the +conversation to the events of the day before. + +"I have, perhaps, incommoded you a little this morning, Monsieur Lecoq?" + +"Me? then you did not see my motto--'always vigilant?' Why, I've been +out ten times this morning; besides marking out work for three of my +men. Ah, we have little time to ourselves, I can tell you. I went to the +Vulcan's Forges to see what news I could get of that poor devil of a +Guespin." + +"And what did you hear?" + +"That I had guessed right. He changed a five-hundred-franc note there +last Wednesday evening at a quarter before ten." + +"That is to say, he is saved?" + +"Well, you may say so. He will be, as soon as we have found Miss Jenny." + +The old justice of the peace could not avoid showing his uneasiness. + +"That will, perhaps, be long and difficult?" + +"Bast! Why so? She is on my black ball there--we shall have her, +accidents excepted, before night." + +"You really think so?" + +"I should say I was sure, to anybody but you. Reflect that this girl has +been connected with the Count de Tremorel, a man of the world, a prince +of the mode. When a girl falls to the gutter, after having, as they say, +dazzled all Paris for six months with her luxury, she does not disappear +entirely, like a stone in the mud. When she has lost all her friends +there are still her creditors, who follow and watch her, awaiting the +day when fortune will smile on her once more. She doesn't trouble +herself about them, she thinks they've forgotten her; a mistake! I know +a milliner whose head is a perfect dictionary of the fashionable world; +she has often done me a good turn. We will go and see her if you say so, +after breakfast, and in two hours she will give us Jenny's address. Ah, +if I were only as sure of pinching Tremorel!" + +M. Plantat gave a sigh of relief. The conversation at last took the turn +he wished. + +"You are thinking of him, then?" asked he. + +"Am I?" shouted M. Lecoq, who started from his seat at the question. +"Now just look at my black ball there. I haven't thought of anybody +else, mark you, since yesterday; I haven't had a wink of sleep all night +for thinking of him. I must have him, and I will!" + +"I don't doubt it; but when?" + +"Ah, there it is! Perhaps to-morrow, perhaps in a month; it depends on +the correctness of my calculations and the exactness of my plan." + +"What, is your plan made?" + +"And decided on." + +M. Plantat became attention itself. + +"I start from the principle that it is impossible for a man, accompanied +by a woman, to hide from the police. In this case, the woman is young, +pretty, and in a noticeable condition; three impossibilities more. Admit +this, and we'll study Hector's character. He isn't a man of superior +shrewdness, for we have found out all his dodges. He isn't a fool, +because his dodges deceived people who are by no means fools. He is then +a medium sort of a man, and his education, reading, relations, and daily +conversation have procured him a number of acquaintances whom he will +try to use. Now for his mind. We know the weakness of his character; +soft, feeble, vacillating, only acting in the last extremity. We have +seen him shrinking from decisive steps, trying always to delay matters. +He is given to being deceived by illusions, and to taking his desires +for accomplished events. In short, he is a coward. And what is his +situation? He has killed his wife, he hopes he has created a belief in +his own death, he has eloped with a young girl, and he has got nearly or +quite a million of francs in his pocket. Now, this position admitted, as +well as the man's character and mind, can we by an effort of thought, +reasoning from his known actions, discover what he has done in such and +such a case? I think so, and I hope I shall prove it to you." + +M. Lecoq rose and promenaded, as his habit was, up and down the room. +"Now let's see," he continued, "how I ought to proceed in order to +discover the probable conduct of a man whose antecedents, traits, and +mind are known to me. To begin with, I throw off my own individuality +and try to assume his. I substitute his will for my own. I cease to be a +detective and become this man, whatever he is. In this case, for +instance, I know very well what I should do if I were Tremorel. I should +take such measures as would throw all the detectives in the universe off +the scent. But I must forget Monsieur Lecoq in order to become Hector de +Tremorel. How would a man reason who was base enough to rob his friend +of his wife, and then see her poison her husband before his very eyes? +We already know that Tremorel hesitated a good while before deciding to +commit this crime. The logic of events, which fools call fatality, urged +him on. It is certain that he looked upon the murder in every point of +view, studied its results, and tried to find means to escape from +justice. All his acts were determined on long beforehand, and neither +immediate necessity nor unforeseen circumstances disturbed his mind. The +moment he had decided on the crime, he said to himself: 'Grant that +Bertha has been murdered; thanks to my precautions, they think that I +have been killed too; Laurence, with whom I elope, writes a letter in +which she announces her suicide; I have money, what must I do?' The +problem, it seems to me, is fairly put in this way." + +"Perfectly so," approved M. Plantat. + +"Naturally, Tremorel would choose from among all the methods of flight +of which he had ever heard, or which he could imagine, that which seemed +to him the surest and most prompt. Did he meditate leaving the country? +That is more than probable. Only, as he was not quite out of his senses, +he saw that it was most difficult, in a foreign country, to put justice +off the track. If a man flies from France to escape punishment, he acts +absurdly. Fancy a man and woman wandering about a country of whose +language they are ignorant; they attract attention at once, are +observed, talked about, followed. They do not make a purchase which is +not remarked; they cannot make any movement without exciting curiosity. +The further they go the greater their danger. If they choose to cross +the ocean and go to free America, they must go aboard a vessel; and the +moment they do that they may be considered as good as lost. You might +bet twenty to one they would find, on landing on the other side, a +detective on the pier armed with a warrant to arrest them. I would +engage to find a Frenchman in eight days, even in London, unless he +spoke pure enough English to pass for a citizen of the United Kingdom. +Such were Tremorel's reflections. He recollected a thousand futile +attempts, a hundred surprising adventures, narrated by the papers; and +it is certain that he gave up the idea of going abroad." + +"It's clear," cried M. Plantat, "perfectly plain and precise. We must +look for the fugitives in France." + +"Yes," replied M. Lecoq. "Now let's find out where and how people can +hide themselves in France. Would it be in the provinces? Evidently not. +In Bordeaux, one of our largest cities, people stare at a man who is not +a Bordelais. The shopkeepers on the quays say to their neighbors: 'Eh! +do you know that man?' There are two cities, however, where a man may +pass unnoticed--Marseilles and Lyons; but both of these are distant, and +to reach them a long journey must be risked--and nothing is so dangerous +as the railway since the telegraph was established. One can fly quickly, +it's true; but on entering a railway carriage a man shuts himself in, +and until he gets out of it he remains under the thumb of the police. +Tremorel knows all this as well as we do. We will put all the large +towns, including Lyons and Marseilles, out of the question." + +"In short, it's impossible to hide in the provinces." + +"Excuse me--there is one means; that is, simply to buy a modest little +place at a distance from towns and railways, and to go and reside on it +under a false name. But this excellent project is quite above Tremorel's +capacity, and requires preparatory steps which he could not risk, +watched as he was by his wife. The field of investigation is thus much +narrowed. Putting aside foreign parts, the provinces, the cities, the +country, Paris remains. It is in Paris that we must look for Tremorel." + +M. Lecoq spoke with the certainty and positiveness of a mathematical +professor; the old justice of the peace listened, as do the professor's +scholars. But he was already accustomed to the detective's surprising +clearness, and was no longer astonished. During the four-and-twenty +hours that he had been witnessing M. Lecoq's calculations and gropings, +he had seized the process and almost appropriated it to himself. He +found this method of reasoning very simple, and could now explain to +himself certain exploits of the police which had hitherto seemed to him +miraculous. But M. Lecoq's "narrow field" of observation appeared still +immense. + +"Paris is a large place," observed the old justice. + +M. Lecoq smiled loftily. + +"Perhaps so; but it is mine. All Paris is under the eye of the police, +just as an ant is under that of the naturalist with his microscope. How +is it, you may ask, that Paris still holds so many professional rogues? +Ah, that is because we are hampered by legal forms. The law compels us +to use only polite weapons against those to whom all weapons are +serviceable. The courts tie our hands. The rogues are clever, but be +sure that our cleverness is much greater than theirs." + +"But," interrupted M. Plantat, "Tremorel is now outside the law; we have +the warrant." + +"What matters it? Does the warrant give me the right to search any house +in which I may have reason to suppose he is hiding himself? No. If I +should go to the house of one of Hector's old friends he would kick me +out of doors. You must know that in France the police have to contend +not only with the rogues, but also with the honest people." + +M. Lecoq always waxed warm on this subject; he felt a strong resentment +against the injustice practised on his profession. Fortunately, at the +moment when he was most excited, the black ball suddenly caught his eye. + +"The devil!" exclaimed he, "I was forgetting Hector." + +M. Plantat, though listening patiently to his companion's indignant +utterances, could not help thinking of the murderer. + +"You said that we must look for Tremorel in Paris," he remarked. + +"And I said truly," responded M. Lecoq in a calmer tone. "I have come to +the conclusion that here, perhaps within two streets of us, perhaps in +the next house, the fugitives are hid. But let's go on with our +calculation of probabilities. Hector knows Paris too well to hope to +conceal himself even for a week in a hotel or lodging-house; he knows +these are too sharply watched by the police. He had plenty of time +before him, and so arranged to hire apartments in some convenient +house." + +"He came to Paris three or four times some weeks ago." + +"Then there's no longer any doubt about it. He hired some apartments +under a false name, paid in advance, and to-day he is comfortably +ensconced in his new residence." + +M. Plantat seemed to feel extremely distressed at this. + +"I know it only too well, Monsieur Lecoq," said he, sadly. "You must be +right. But is not the wretch thus securely hidden from us? Must we wait +till some accident reveals him to us? Can you search one by one all the +houses in Paris?" + +The detective's nose wriggled under his gold spectacles, and the justice +of the peace, who observed it, and took it for a good sign, felt all his +hopes reviving in him. + +"I've cudgelled my brain in vain--" he began. + +"Pardon me," interrupted M. Lecoq. "Having hired apartments, Tremorel +naturally set about furnishing them." + +"Evidently." + +"Of course he would furnish them sumptuously, both because he is fond of +luxury and has plenty of money, and because he couldn't carry a young +girl from a luxurious home to a garret. I'd wager that they have as fine +a drawing-room as that at Valfeuillu." + +"Alas! How can that help us?" + +"Peste! It helps us much, my dear friend, as you shall see. Hector, as +he wished for a good deal of expensive furniture, did not have recourse +to a broker; nor had he time to go to the Faubourg St. Antoine. +Therefore, he simply went to an upholsterer." + +"Some fashionable upholsterer--" + +"No, he would have risked being recognized. It is clear that he assumed +a false name, the same in which he had hired his rooms. He chose some +shrewd and humble upholsterer, ordered his goods, made sure that they +would be delivered on a certain day, and paid for them." + +M. Plantat could not repress a joyful exclamation; he began to see M. +Lecoq's drift. + +"This merchant," pursued the latter, "must have retained his rich +customer in his memory, this customer who did not beat him down, and +paid cash. If he saw him again, he would recognize him." + +"What an idea!" cried M. Plantat, delighted. "Let's get photographs and +portraits of Tremorel as quick as we can--let's send a man to Orcival +for them." + +M. Lecoq smiled shrewdly and proceeded: + +"Keep yourself easy; I have done what was necessary. I slipped three of +the count's cartes-de-visite in my pocket yesterday during the inquest. +This morning I took down, out of the directory, the names of all the +upholsterers in Paris, and made three lists of them. At this moment +three of my men, each with a list and a photograph, are going from +upholsterer to upholsterer showing them the picture and asking them if +they recognize it as the portrait of one of their customers. If one of +them answers 'yes,' we've got our man." + +"And we will get him!" cried the old man, pale with emotion. + +"Not yet; don't shout victory too soon. It is possible that Hector was +prudent enough not to go to the upholsterer's himself. In this case we +are beaten in that direction. But no, he was not so sly as that--" + +M. Lecoq checked himself. Janouille, for the third time, opened the +door, and said, in a deep bass voice: + +"Breakfast is ready." + +Janouille was a remarkable cook; M. Plantat had ample experience of the +fact when he began upon her dishes. But he was not hungry, and could not +force himself to eat; he could not think of anything but a plan which he +had to propose to his host, and he had that oppressive feeling which is +experienced when one is about to do something which has been decided on +with hesitation and regret. The detective, who, like all men of great +activity, was a great eater, vainly essayed to entertain his guest, and +filled his glass with the choicest Chateau Margaux; the old man sat +silent and sad, and only responded by monosyllables. He tried to speak +out and to struggle against the hesitation he felt. He did not think, +when he came, that he should have this reluctance; he had said to +himself that he would go in and explain himself. Did he fear to be +ridiculed? No. His passion was above the fear of sarcasm or irony. And +what did he risk? Nothing. Had not M. Lecoq already divined the secret +thoughts he dared not impart to him, and read his heart from the first? +He was reflecting thus when the door-bell rang. Janouille went to the +door, and speedily returned with the announcement that Goulard begged to +speak with M. Lecoq, and asked if she should admit him. + +"Certainly." + +The chains clanked and the locks scraped, and presently Goulard made his +appearance. He had donned his best clothes, with spotless linen, and a +very high collar. He was respectful, and stood as stiffly as a +well-drilled grenadier before his sergeant. + +"What the deuce brought you here?" said M. Lecoq, sternly. "And who +dared to give you my address?" + +"Monsieur," said Goulard, visibly intimidated by his reception, "please +excuse me; I was sent by Doctor Gendron with this letter for Monsieur +Plantat." + +"Oh," cried M. Plantat, "I asked the doctor, last evening, to let me +know the result of the autopsy, and not knowing where I should put up, +took the liberty of giving your address." + +M. Lecoq took the letter and handed it to his guest. "Read it, read it," +said the latter. "There is nothing in it to conceal." + +"All right; but come into the other room. Janouille, give this man some +breakfast. Make yourself at home, Goulard, and empty a bottle to my +health." + +When the door of the other room was closed, M. Lecoq broke the seal of +the letter, and read: + +"MY DEAR PLANTAT: + +"You asked me for a word, so I scratch off a line or two which I shall +send to our sorcerer's--" + +"Oh, ho," cried M. Lecoq. "Monsieur Gendron is too good, too flattering, +really!" + +No matter, the compliment touched his heart. He resumed the letter: + +"At three this morning we exhumed poor Sauvresy's body. I certainly +deplore the frightful circumstances of this worthy man's death as much +as anyone; but on the other hand, I cannot help rejoicing at this +excellent opportunity to test the efficacy of my sensitive paper--" + +"Confound these men of science," cried the indignant Plantat. "They are +all alike!" + +"Why so? I can very well comprehend the doctor's involuntary sensations. +Am I not ravished when I encounter a fine crime?" + +And without waiting for his guest's reply, he continued reading the +letter: + +"The experiments promised to be all the more conclusive as aconitine is +one of those drugs which conceal themselves most obstinately from +analysis. I proceed thus: After heating the suspected substances in +twice their weight of alcohol, I drop the liquid gently into a vase with +edges a little elevated, at the bottom of which is a piece of paper on +which I have placed my tests. If my paper retains its color, there is no +poison; if it changes, the poison is there. In this case my paper was of +a light yellow color, and if we were not mistaken, it ought either to +become covered with brown spots, or completely brown. I explained this +experiment beforehand to the judge of instruction and the experts who +were assisting me. Ah, my friend, what a success I had! When the first +drops of alcohol fell, the paper at once became a dark brown; your +suspicions are thus proved to be quite correct. The substances which I +submitted to the test were liberally saturated with aconitine. I never +obtained more decisive results in my laboratory. I expect that my +conclusions will be disputed in court; but I have means of verifying +them, so that I shall surely confound all the chemists who oppose me. I +think, my dear friend, that you will not be indifferent to the +satisfaction I feel--" + +M. Plantat lost patience. + +"This is unheard-of!" cried he. "Incredible! Would you say, now, that +this poison which he found in Sauvresy's body was stolen from his own +laboratory? Why, that body is nothing more to him than 'suspected +matter!' And he already imagines himself discussing the merits of his +sensitive paper in court!" + +"He has reason to look for antagonists in court." + +"And meanwhile he makes his experiments, and analyzes with the coolest +blood in the world; he continues his abominable cooking, boiling and +filtering, and preparing his arguments--!" + +M. Lecoq did not share in his friend's indignation; he was not sorry at +the prospect of a bitter struggle in court, and he imagined a great +scientific duel, like that between Orfila and Raspail, the provincial +and Parisian chemists. + +"If Tremorel has the face to deny his part in Sauvresy's murder," said +he, "we shall have a superb trial of it." + +This word "trial" put an end to M. Plantat's long hesitation. + +"We mustn't have any trial," cried he. + +The old man's violence, from one who was usually so calm and +self-possessed, seemed to amaze M. Lecoq. + +"Ah ha," thought he, "I'm going to know all." He added aloud: + +"What, no trial?" + +M. Plantat had turned whiter than a sheet; he was trembling, and his +voice was hoarse, as if broken by sobs. + +"I would give my fortune," resumed he "to avoid a trial--every centime +of it, though it doesn't amount to much. But how can we secure this +wretch Tremorel from a conviction? What subterfuge shall we invent? You +alone, my friend, can advise me in the frightful extremity to which you +see me reduced, and aid me to accomplish what I wish. If there is any +way in the world, you will find it and save me--" + +"But, my--" + +"Pardon--hear me, and you will comprehend me. I am going to be frank +with you, as I would be with myself; and you will see the reason of my +hesitation, my silence, in short, of all my conduct since the discovery +of the crime." + +"I am listening." + +"It's a sad history, Lecoq. I had reached an age at which a man's career +is, as they say, finished, when I suddenly lost my wife and my two sons, +my whole joy, my whole hope in this world. I found myself alone in life, +more lost than the shipwrecked man in the midst of the sea, without a +plank to sustain me. I was a soulless body, when chance brought me to +settle down at Orcival. There I saw Laurence; she was just fifteen, and +never lived there a creature who united in herself so much intelligence, +grace, innocence, and beauty. Courtois became my friend, and soon +Laurence was like a daughter to me. I doubtless loved her then, but I +did not confess it to myself, for I did not read my heart clearly. She +was so young, and I had gray hairs! I persuaded myself that my love for +her was like that of a father, and it was as a father that she cherished +me. Ah, I passed many a delicious hour listening to her gentle prattle +and her innocent confidences; I was happy when I saw her skipping about +in my garden, picking the roses I had reared for her, and laying waste +my parterres; and I said to myself that existence is a precious gift +from God. My dream then was to follow her through life. I fancied her +wedded to some good man who made her happy, while I remained the friend +of the wife, after having been the confidant of the maiden. I took good +care of my fortune, which is considerable, because I thought of her +children, and wished to hoard up treasures for them. Poor, poor +Laurence!" + +M. Lecoq fidgeted in his chair, rubbed his face with his handkerchief, +and seemed ill at ease. He was really much more touched than he wished +to appear. + +"One day," pursued the old man, "my friend Courtois spoke to me of her +marriage with Tremorel; then I measured the depth of my love. I felt +terrible agonies which it is impossible to describe; it was like a +long-smothered fire which suddenly breaks forth and devours everything. +To be old, and to love a child! I thought I was going crazy; I tried to +reason, to upbraid myself, but it was of no avail. What can reason or +irony do against passion? I kept silent and suffered. To crown all, +Laurence selected me as her confidant--what torture! She came to me to +talk of Hector; she admired in him all that seemed to her superior to +other men, so that none could be compared with him. She was enchanted +with his bold horseback riding, and thought everything he said sublime." + +"Did you know what a wretch Tremorel was?" + +"Alas, I did not yet know it. What was this man who lived at Valfeuillu +to me? But from the day that I learned that he was going to deprive me +of my most precious treasure, I began to study him. I should have been +somewhat consoled if I had found him worthy of her; so I dogged him, as +you, Monsieur Lecoq, cling to the criminal whom you are pursuing. I went +often to Paris to learn what I could of his past life; I became a +detective, and went about questioning everybody who had known him, and +the more I heard of him the more I despised him. It was thus that I +found out his interviews with Jenny and his relations with Bertha." + +"Why didn't you divulge them?" + +"Honor commanded silence. Had I a right to dishonor my friend and ruin +his happiness and life, because of this ridiculous, hopeless love? I +kept my own counsel after speaking to Courtois about Jenny, at which he +only laughed. When I hinted something against Hector to Laurence, she +almost ceased coming to see me." + +"Ah! I shouldn't have had either your patience or your generosity." + +"Because you are not as old as I, Monsieur Lecoq. Oh, I cruelly hated +this Tremorel! I said to myself, when I saw three women of such +different characters smitten with him, 'what is there in him to be so +loved?'" + +"Yes," answered M. Lecoq, responding to a secret thought, "women often +err; they don't judge men as we do." + +"Many a time," resumed the justice of the peace, "I thought of provoking +him to fight with me, that I might kill him; but then Laurence would not +have looked at me any more. However, I should perhaps have spoken at +last, had not Sauvresy fallen ill and died. I knew that he had made his +wife and Tremorel swear to marry each other; I knew that a terrible +reason forced them to keep their oath; and I thought Laurence saved. +Alas, on the contrary she was lost! One evening, as I was passing the +mayor's house, I saw a man getting over the wall into the garden; it was +Tremorel. I recognized him perfectly. I was beside myself with rage, and +swore that I would wait and murder him. I did wait, but he did not come +out that night." + +M. Plantat hid his face in his hands; his heart bled at the recollection +of that night of anguish, the whole of which he had passed in waiting +for a man in order to kill him. M. Lecoq trembled with indignation. + +"This Tremorel," cried he, "is the most abominable of scoundrels. There +is no excuse for his infamies and crimes. And yet you want to save him +from trial, the galleys, the scaffold which await him." + +The old man paused a moment before replying. Of the thoughts which now +crowded tumultuously in his mind, he did not know which to utter first. +Words seemed powerless to betray his sensations; he wanted to express +all that he felt in a single sentence. + +"What matters Tremorel to me?" said he at last. "Do you think I care +about him? I don't care whether he lives or dies, whether he succeeds in +flying or ends his life some morning in the Place Roquette." + +"Then why have you such a horror of a trial?" + +"Because--" + +"Are you a friend to his family, and anxious to preserve the great name +which he has covered with mud and devoted to infamy?" + +"No, but I am anxious for Laurence, my friend; the thought of her never +leaves me." + +"But she is not his accomplice; she is totally ignorant--there's no +doubt of it--that he has killed his wife." + +"Yes," resumed M. Plantat, "Laurence is innocent; she is only the victim +of an odious villain. It is none the less true, though, that she would +be more cruelly punished than he. If Tremorel is brought before the +court, she will have to appear too, as a witness if not as a prisoner. +And who knows that her truth will not be suspected? She will be asked +whether she really had no knowledge of the project to murder Bertha, and +whether she did not encourage it. Bertha was her rival; it is natural to +suppose that she hated her. If I were the judge I should not hesitate to +include Laurence in the indictment." + +"With our aid she will prove victoriously that she was ignorant of all, +and has been outrageously deceived." + +"May be; but will she be any the less dishonored and forever lost? Must +she not, in that case, appear in public, answer the judge's questions, +and narrate the story of her shame and misfortunes? Must not she say +where, when, and how she fell, and repeat the villain's words to her? +Can you imagine that of her own free will she compelled herself to +announce her suicide at the risk of killing her parents with grief? No. +Then she must explain what menaces forced her to do this, which surely +was not her own idea. And worse than all, she will be compelled to +confess her love for Tremorel." + +"No," answered the detective. "Let us not exaggerate anything. You know +as well as I do that justice is most considerate with the innocent +victims of affairs of this sort." + +"Consideration? Eh! Could justice protect her, even if it would, from +the publicity in which trials are conducted? You might touch the +magistrates' hearts; but there are fifty journalists who, since this +crime, have been cutting their pens and getting their paper ready. Do +you think that, to please us, they would suppress the scandalous +proceedings which I am anxious to avoid, and which the noble name of the +murderer would make a great sensation? Does not this case unite every +feature which gives success to judicial dramas? Oh, there's nothing +wanting, neither unworthy passion, nor poison, nor vengeance, nor +murder. Laurence represents in it the romantic and sentimental element; +she--my darling girl--will become a heroine of the assizes; it is she +who will attract the readers of the Police Gazette; the reporters will +tell when she blushes and when she weeps; they will rival each other in +describing her toilet and bearing. Then there will be the photographers +besieging her, and if she refuses to sit, portraits of some hussy of the +street will be sold as hers. She will yearn to hide herself--but where? +Can a few locks and bars shelter her from eager curiosity? She will +become famous. What shame and misery! If she is to be saved, Monsieur +Lecoq, her name must not be spoken. I ask of you, is it possible? Answer +me." + +The old man was very violent, yet his speech was simple, devoid of the +pompous phrases of passion. Anger lit up his eyes with a strange fire; +he seemed young again--he loved, and defended his beloved. + +M. Lecoq was silent; his companion insisted. + +"Answer me." + +"Who knows?" + +"Why seek to mislead me? Haven't I as well as you had experience in +these things? If Tremorel is brought to trial, all is over with +Laurence! And I love her! Yes, I dare to confess it to you, and let you +see the depth of my grief, I love her now as I have never loved her. She +is dishonored, an object of contempt, perhaps still adores this +wretch--what matters it? I love her a thousand times more than before +her fall, for then I loved her without hope, while now--" + +He stopped, shocked at what he was going to say. His eyes fell before M. +Lecoq's steady gaze, and he blushed for this shameful yet human hope +that he had betrayed. + +"You know all, now," resumed he, in a calmer tone; "consent to aid me, +won't you? Ah, if you only would, I should not think I had repaid you +were I to give you half my fortune--and I am rich--" + +M. Lecoq stopped him with a haughty gesture. + +"Enough, Monsieur Plantat," said he, in a bitter tone, "I can do a +service to a person whom I esteem, love and pity with all my soul; but I +cannot sell such a service." + +"Believe that I did not wish--" + +"Yes, yes, you wished to pay me. Oh, don't excuse yourself, don't deny +it. There are professions, I know, in which manhood and integrity seem +to count for nothing. Why offer me money? What reason have you for +judging me so mean as to sell my favors? You are like the rest, who +can't fancy what a man in my position is. If I wanted to be rich--richer +than you--I could be so in a fortnight. Don't you see that I hold in my +hands the honor and lives of fifty people? Do you think I tell all I +know? I have here," added he, tapping his forehead, "twenty secrets that +I could sell to-morrow, if I would, for a plump hundred thousand +apiece." + +He was indignant, but beneath his anger a certain sad resignation might +be perceived. He had often to reject such offers. + +"If you go and resist this prejudice established for ages, and say that +a detective is honest and cannot be otherwise, that he is tenfold more +honest than any merchant or notary, because he has tenfold the +temptations, without the benefits of his honesty; if you say this, +they'll laugh in your face. I could get together to-morrow, with +impunity, without any risk, at least a million. Who would mistrust it? I +have a conscience, it's true; but a little consideration for these +things would not be unpleasant. When it would be so easy for me to +divulge what I know of those who have been obliged to trust me, or +things which I have surprised, there is perhaps a merit in holding my +tongue. And still, the first man who should come along to-morrow--a +defaulting banker, a ruined merchant, a notary who has gambled on +'change--would feel himself compromised by walking up the boulevard with +me! A policeman--fie! But old Tabaret used to say to me, that the +contempt of such people was only one form of fear." + +M. Plantat was dismayed. How could he, a man of delicacy, prudence and +finesse, have committed such an awkward mistake? He had just cruelly +wounded this man, who was so well disposed toward him, and he had +everything to fear from his resentment. + +"Far be it from me, dear friend," he commenced, "to intend the offence +you imagine. You have misunderstood an insignificant phrase, which I let +escape carelessly, and had no meaning at all." + +M. Lecoq grew calmer. + +"Perhaps so. You will forgive my being so susceptible, as I am more +exposed to insults than most people. Let's leave the subject, which is a +painful one, and return to Tremorel." + +M. Plantat was just thinking whether he should dare to broach his +projects again, and he was singularly touched by M. Lecoq's delicately +resuming the subject of them. + +"I have only to await your decision," said the justice of the peace. + +"I will not conceal from you," resumed M. Lecoq, "that you are asking a +very difficult thing, and one which is contrary to my duty, which +commands me to search for Tremorel, to arrest him, and deliver him up to +justice. You ask me to protect him from the law--" + +"In the name of an innocent creature whom you will thereby save." + +"Once in my life I sacrificed my duty. I could not resist the tears of a +poor old mother, who clung to my knees and implored pardon for her son. +To-day I am going to exceed my right, and to risk an attempt for which +my conscience will perhaps reproach me. I yield to your entreaty." + +"Oh, my dear Lecoq, how grateful I am!" cried M. Plantat, transported +with joy. + +But the detective remained grave, almost sad, and reflected. + +"Don't let us encourage a hope which may be disappointed," he resumed. +"I have but one means of keeping a criminal like Tremorel out of the +courts; will it succeed?" + +"Yes, yes. If you wish it, it will!" + +M. Lecoq could not help smiling at the old man's faith. + +"I am certainly a clever detective," said he. "But I am only a man after +all, and I can't answer for the actions of another man. All depends upon +Hector. If it were another criminal, I should say I was sure. I am +doubtful about him, I frankly confess. We ought, above all, to count +upon the firmness of Mademoiselle Courtois; can we, think you?" + +"She is firmness itself." + +"Then there's hope. But can we really suppress this affair? What will +happen when Sauvresy's narrative is found? It must be concealed +somewhere in Valfeuillu, and Tremorel, at least, did not find it." + +"It will not be found," said M. Plantat, quickly. + +"You think so?" + +"I am sure of it." + +M. Lecoq gazed intently at his companion, and simply said: + +"Ah!" + +But this is what he thought: "At last I am going to find out where the +manuscript which we heard read the other night, and which is in two +handwritings, came from." + +After a moment's hesitation, M. Plantat went on: + +"I have put my life in your hands, Monsieur Lecoq; I can, of course, +confide my honor to you. I know you. I know that, happen what may--" + +"I shall keep my mouth shut, on my honor." + +"Very well. The day that I caught Tremorel at the mayor's, I wished to +verify the suspicions I had, and so I broke the seal of Sauvresy's +package of papers." + +"And you did not use them?" + +"I was dismayed at my abuse of confidence. Besides, had I the right to +deprive poor Sauvresy, who was dying in order to avenge himself, of his +vengeance?" + +"But you gave the papers to Madame de Tremorel?" + +"True; but Bertha had a vague presentiment of the fate that was in store +for her. About a fortnight before her death she came and confided to me +her husband's manuscript, which she had taken care to complete. I broke +the seals and read it, to see if he had died a violent death." + +"Why, then, didn't you tell me? Why did you let me hunt, hesitate, grope +about--" + +"I love Laurence, Monsieur Lecoq, and to deliver up Tremorel was to open +an abyss between her and me." + +The detective bowed. "The deuce," thought he, "the old justice is +shrewd--as shrewd as I am. Well, I like him, and I'm going to give him a +surprise." + +M. Plantat yearned to question his host and to know what the sole means +of which he spoke were, which might be successful in preventing a trial +and saving Laurence, but he did not dare to do so. + +The detective bent over his desk lost in thought. He held a pencil in +his hand and mechanically drew fantastic figures on a large sheet of +white paper which lay before him. He suddenly came out of his revery. He +had just solved a last difficulty; his plan was now entire and complete. +He glanced at the clock. + +"Two o'clock," cried he, "and I have an appointment between three and +four with Madame Charman about Jenny." + +"I am at your disposal," returned his guest. + +"All right. When Jenny is disposed of we must look after Tremorel; so +let's take our measures to finish it up to-day." + +"What! do you hope to do everything to-day--" + +"Certainly. Rapidity is above all necessary in our profession. It often +takes a month to regain an hour lost. We've a chance now of catching +Hector by surprise; to-morrow it will be too late. Either we shall have +him within four-and-twenty hours or we must change our batteries. Each +of my three men has a carriage and a good horse; they may be able to +finish with the upholsterers within an hour from now. If I calculate +aright, we shall have the address in an hour, or at most in two hours, +and then we will act." + +Lecoq, as he spoke, took a sheet of paper surmounted by his arms out of +his portfolio, and rapidly wrote several lines. + +"See here," said he, "what I've written to one of my lieutenants." + +"MONSIEUR JOB--"Get together six or eight of our men at once and take +them to the wine merchant's at the corner of the Rue des Martyrs and the +Rue Lamartine; await my orders there." + +"Why there and not here?" + +"Because we must avoid needless excursions. At the place I have +designated we are only two steps from Madame Charman's and near +Tremorel's retreat; for the wretch has hired his rooms in the quarter of +Notre Dame de Lorette." + +M. Plantat gave an exclamation of surprise. + +"What makes you think that?" + +The detective smiled, as if the question seemed foolish to him. + +"Don't you recollect that the envelope of the letter addressed by +Mademoiselle Courtois to her family to announce her suicide bore the +Paris postmark, and that of the branch office of Rue St. Lazare? Now +listen to this: On leaving her aunt's house, Laurence must have gone +directly to Tremorel's apartments, the address of which he had given +her, and where he had promised to meet her on Thursday morning. She +wrote the letter, then, in his apartments. Can we admit that she had the +presence of mind to post the letter in another quarter than that in +which she was? It is at least probable that she was ignorant of the +terrible reasons which Tremorel had to fear a search and pursuit. Had +Hector foresight enough to suggest this trick to her? No, for if he +wasn't a fool he would have told her to post the letter somewhere +outside of Paris. It is therefore scarcely possible that it was posted +anywhere else than at the nearest branch office." + +These suppositions were so simple that M. Plantat wondered he had not +thought of them before. But men do not see clearly in affairs in which +they are deeply interested; passion dims the eyes, as heat in a room +dims a pair of spectacles. He had lost, with his coolness, a part of his +clearsightedness. His anxiety was very great; for he thought M. Lecoq +had a singular mode of keeping his promise. + +"It seems to me," he could not help remarking, "that if you wish to keep +Hector from trial, the men you have summoned together will be more +embarrassing than useful." + +M. Lecoq thought that his guest's tone and look betrayed a certain +doubt, and was irritated by it. + +"Do you distrust me, Monsieur Plantat?" + +The old man tried to protest. + +"Believe me--" + +"You have my word," resumed M. Lecoq, "and if you knew me better you +would know that I always keep it when I have given it. I have told you +that I would do my best to save Mademoiselle Laurence; but remember that +I have promised you my assistance, not absolute success. Let me, then, +take such measures as I think best." + +So saying, he rang for Janouille. + +"Here's a letter," said he when she appeared, "which must be sent to Job +at once." + +"I will carry it." + +"By no means. You will be pleased to remain here and wait for the men +that I sent out this morning. As they come in, send them to the wine +merchant's at the corner of the Rue des Martyrs; you know it--opposite +the church. They'll find a numerous company there." + +As he gave his orders, he took off his gown, assumed a long black coat, +and carefully adjusted his wig. + +"Will Monsieur be back this evening?" asked Janouille. + +"I don't know." + +"And if anybody comes from over yonder?" + +"Over yonder" with a detective, always means "the house"--otherwise the +prefecture of police. + +"Say that I am out on the Corbeil affair." + +M. Lecoq was soon ready. He had the air, physiognomy, and manners of a +highly respectable chief clerk of fifty. Gold spectacles, an umbrella, +everything about him exhaled an odor of the ledger. + +"Now," said he to M. Plantat. "Let's hurry away." Goulard, who had made +a hearty breakfast, was waiting for his hero in the dining-room. + +"Ah ha, old fellow," said M. Lecoq. "So you've had a few words with my +wine. How do you find it?" + +"Delicious, my chief; perfect--that is to say, a true nectar." + +"It's cheered you up, I hope." + +"Oh, yes, my chief." + +"Then you may follow us a few steps and mount guard at the door of the +house where you see us go in. I shall probably have to confide a pretty +little girl to your care whom you will carry to Monsieur Domini. And +open your eyes; for she's a sly creature, and very apt to inveigle you +on the way and slip through your fingers." + +They went out, and Janouille stoutly barricaded herself behind them. + + + + +XXV + + +Whosoever needs a loan of money, or a complete suit of clothes in the +top of the fashion, a pair of ladies' boots, or an Indian cashmere; a +porcelain table service or a good picture; whosoever desires diamonds, +curtains, laces, a house in the country, or a provision of wood for +winter fires--may procure all these, and many other things besides, at +Mme. Charman's. + +Mme. Charman lives at 136, Rue Notre Dame de Lorette, on the first story +above the ground-floor. Her customers must give madame some guarantee of +their credit; a woman, if she be young and pretty, may be accommodated +at madame's at the reasonable rate of two hundred per cent interest. +Madame has, at these rates, considerable custom, and yet has not made a +large fortune. She must necessarily risk a great deal, and bears heavy +losses as well as receives large profits. Then she is, as she is pleased +to say, too honest; and true enough, she is honest--she would rather +sell her dress off her back than let her signature go to protest. + +Madame is a blonde, slight, gentle, and not wanting in a certain +distinction of manner; she invariably wears, whether it be summer or +winter, a black silk dress. They say she has a husband, but no one has +ever seen him, which does not prevent his reputation for good conduct +from being above suspicion. However, honorable as may be Mme. Charman's +profession, she has more than once had business with M. Lecoq; she has +need of him and fears him as she does fire. She, therefore, welcomed the +detective and his companion--whom she took for one of his +colleagues--somewhat as the supernumerary of a theatre would greet his +manager if the latter chanced to pay him a visit in his humble lodgings. + +She was expecting them. When they rang, she advanced to meet them in the +ante-chamber, and greeted M. Lecoq graciously and smilingly. She +conducted them into her drawing-room, invited them to sit in her best +arm-chairs, and pressed some refreshments upon them. + +"I see, dear Madame," began M. Lecoq, "that you have received my little +note." + +"Yes, Monsieur Lecoq, early this morning; I was not up." + +"Very good. And have you been so kind as to do the service I asked?" + +"How can you ask me, when you know that I would go through the fire for +you? I set about it at once, getting up expressly for the purpose." + +"Then you've got the address of Pelagie Taponnet, called Jenny?" + +"Yes, I have," returned Mme. Charman, with an obsequious bow. "If I were +the kind of woman to magnify my services, I would tell you what trouble +it cost me to find this address, and how I ran all over Paris and spent +ten francs in cab hire." + +"Well, let's come to the point." + +"The truth is, I had the pleasure of seeing Miss Jenny day before +yesterday." + +"You are joking!" + +"Not the least in the world. And let me tell you that she is a very +courageous and honest girl." + +"Really!" + +"She is, indeed. Why, she has owed me four hundred and eighty francs for +two years. I hardly thought the debt worth much, as you may imagine. But +Jenny came to me day before yesterday all out of breath and told me that +she had inherited some money, and had brought me what she owed me. And +she was not joking, either; for her purse was full of bank notes, and +she paid me the whole of my bill. She's a good girl!" added Mme. +Charman, as if profoundly convinced of the truth of her encomium. + +M. Lecoq exchanged a significant glance with the old justice; the same +idea struck them both at the same moment. These bank-notes could only be +the payment for some important service rendered by Jenny to Tremorel. M. +Lecoq, however, wished for more precise information. + +"What was Jenny's condition before this windfall?" asked he. + +"Ah, Monsieur Lecoq, she was in a dreadful condition. Since the count +deserted her she has been constantly falling lower and lower. She sold +all she had piece by piece. At last, she mixed with the worst kind of +people, drank absinthe, they say, and had nothing to put to her back. +When she got any money she spent it on a parcel of hussies instead of +buying clothes." + +"And where is she living?" + +"Right by, in a house in the Rue Vintimille." + +"If that is so," replied M. Lecoq, severely, "I am astonished that she +is not here." + +"It's not my fault, dear Monsieur Lecoq; I know where the nest is, but +not where the bird is. She was away this morning when I sent for her." + +"The deuce! But then--it's very annoying; I must hunt her up at once." + +"You needn't disturb yourself. Jenny ought to return before four +o'clock, and one of my girls is waiting for her with orders to bring her +here as soon as she comes in, without even letting her go up to her +room." + +"We'll wait for her then." + +M. Lecoq and his friend waited about a quarter of an hour, when Mme. +Charman suddenly got up. + +"I hear my girl's step on the stairs," said she. + +"Listen to me," answered M. Lecoq, "if it is she, manage to make Jenny +think that it was you who sent for her; we will seem to have come in by +the merest chance." + +Mme. Charman responded by a gesture of assent. She was going towards the +door when the detective detained her by the arm. + +"One word more. When you see me fairly engaged in conversation with her, +please be so good as to go and overlook your work-people in the shops. +What I have to say will not interest you in the least." + +"I understand." + +"But no trickery, you know. I know where the closet of your bedroom is, +well enough to be sure that everything that is said here may be +overheard in it." + +Mme. Charman's emissary opened the door; there was a loud rustling of +silks along the corridor; and Jenny appeared in all her glory. She was +no longer the fresh and pretty minx whom Hector had known--the provoking +large-eyed Parisian demoiselle, with haughty head and petulant grace. A +single year had withered her, as a too hot summer does the roses, and +had destroyed her fragile beauty beyond recall. She was not twenty, and +still it was hard to discern that she had been charming, and was yet +young. For she had grown old like vice; her worn features and hollow +cheeks betrayed the dissipations of her life; her eyes had lost their +long, languishing lids; her mouth had a pitiful expression of +stupefaction; and absinthe had broken the clear tone of her voice. She +was richly dressed in a new robe, with a great deal of lace and a jaunty +hat; yet she had a wretched expression; she was all besmeared with rouge +and paint. + +When she came in she seemed very angry. + +"What an idea!" she cried, without taking the trouble to bow to anyone; +"what sense is there in sending for me to come here in this way, almost +by force, and by a very impudent young woman?" + +Mme. Charman hastened to meet her old customer, embraced her in spite of +herself, and pressed her to her heart. + +"Why, don't be so angry, dear--I thought you would be delighted and +overwhelm me with thanks." + +"I? What for?" + +"Because, my dear girl, I had a surprise in store for you. Ah, I'm not +ungrateful; you came here yesterday and settled your account with me, +and to-day I mean to reward you for it. Come, cheer up; you're going to +have a splendid chance, because just at this moment I happen to have a +piece of exquisite velvet--" + +"A pretty thing to bring me here for!" + +"All silk, my dear, at thirty francs the yard. Ha, 'tis wonderfully +cheap, the best--" + +"Eh! What care I for your 'chance?' Velvet in July--are you making fun +of me?" + +"Let me show it to you, now." + +"Never! I am expected to dinner at Asnieres, and so--" + +She was about to go away despite Mme. Charman's attempts to detain her, +when M. Lecoq thought it was time to interfere. + +"Why, am I mistaken?" cried he, as if amazed; "is it really Miss Jenny +whom I have the honor of seeing?" + +She scanned him with a half-angry, half-surprised air, and said: + +"Yes, it is I; what of it?" + +"What! Are you so forgetful? Don't you recognize me?" + +"No, not at all." + +"Yet I was one of your admirers once, my dear, and used to breakfast +with you when you lived near the Madeleine; in the count's time, you +know." + +He took off his spectacles as if to wipe them, but really to launch a +furious look at Mme. Charman, who, not daring to resist, beat a hasty +retreat. + +"I knew Tremorel well in other days," resumed the detective. "And--by +the bye, have you heard any news of him lately?" + +"I saw him about a week ago." + +"Stop, though--haven't you heard of that horrible affair?" + +"No. What was it?" + +"Really, now, haven't you heard? Don't you read the papers? It was a +dreadful thing, and has been the talk of all Paris for the past +forty-eight hours." + +"Tell me about it, quick!" + +"You know that he married the widow of one of his friends. He was +thought to be very happy at home; not at all; he has murdered his wife +with a knife." + +Jenny grew pale under her paint. + +"Is it possible?" stammered she. She seemed much affected, but not very +greatly surprised, which M. Lecoq did not fail to remark. + +"It is so possible," he resumed, "that he is at this moment in prison, +will soon be tried, and without a doubt will be convicted." + +M. Plantat narrowly observed Jenny; he looked for an explosion of +despair, screams, tears, at least a light nervous attack; he was +mistaken. + +Jenny now detested Tremorel. Sometimes she felt the weight of her +degradation, and she accused Hector of her present ignominy. She +heartily hated him, though she smiled when she saw him, got as much +money out of him as she could, and cursed him behind his back. Instead +of bursting into tears, she therefore laughed aloud. + +"Well done for Tremorel," said she. "Why did he leave me? Good for her +too." + +"Why so?" + +"What did she deceive her husband for? It was she who took Hector from +me--she, a rich, married woman! But I've always said Hector was a poor +wretch." + +"Frankly, that's my notion too. When a man acts as Tremorel has toward +you, he's a villain." + +"It's so, isn't it?" + +"Parbleu! But I'm not surprised at his conduct. For his wife's murder is +the least of his crimes; why, he tried to put it off upon somebody +else!" + +"That doesn't surprise me." + +"He accused a poor devil as innocent as you or I, who might have been +condemned to death if he hadn't been able to tell where he was on +Wednesday night." + +M. Lecoq said this lightly, with intended deliberation, so as to watch +the impression he produced on Jenny. + +"Do you know who the man was?" asked she in a tremulous voice. + +"The papers said it was a poor lad who was his gardener." + +"A little man, wasn't he, thin, very dark, with black hair?" + +"Just so." + +"And whose name was--wait now--was--Guespin." + +"Ah ha, you know him then?" + +Jenny hesitated. She was trembling very much, and evidently regretted +that she had gone so far. + +"Bah!" said she at last. "I don't see why I shouldn't tell what I know. +I'm an honest girl, if Tremorel is a rogue; and I don't want them to +condemn a poor wretch who is innocent." + +"You know something about it, then?" + +"Well, I know nearly all about it--that's honest, ain't it? About a week +ago Hector wrote to me to meet him at Melun; I went, found him, and we +breakfasted together. Then he told me that he was very much annoyed +about his cook's marriage; for one of his servants was deeply in love +with her, and might go and raise a rumpus at the wedding." + +"Ah, he spoke to you about the wedding, then?" + +"Wait a minute. Hector seemed very much embarrassed, not knowing how to +avoid the disturbance he feared. Then I advised him to send the servant +off out of the way on the wedding-day. He thought a moment, and said +that my advice was good. He added that he had found a means of doing +this; on the evening of the marriage he would send the man on an errand +for me, telling him that the affair was to be concealed from the +countess. I was to dress up--as a chambermaid, and wait for the man at +the cafe in the Place du Chatelet, between half-past nine and ten that +evening; I was to sit at the table nearest the entrance on the right, +with a bouquet in my hand, so that he should recognize me. He would come +in and give me a package; then I was to ask him to take something, and +so get him tipsy if possible, and then walk about Paris with him till +morning." + +Jenny expressed herself with difficulty, hesitating, choosing her words, +and trying to remember exactly what Tremorel said. + +"And you," interrupted M. Lecoq, "did you believe all this story about a +jealous servant?" + +"Not quite; but I fancied that he had some intrigue on foot, and I +wasn't sorry to help him deceive a woman whom I detested, and who had +wronged me." + +"So you did as he told you?" + +"Exactly, from beginning to end; everything happened just as Hector had +foreseen. The man came along at just ten o'clock, took me for a maid, +and gave me the package. I naturally offered him a glass of beer; he +took it and proposed another, which I also accepted. He is a very nice +fellow, this gardener, and I passed a very pleasant evening with him. He +knew lots of queer things, and--" + +"Never mind that. What did you do then?" + +"After the beer we had some wine, then some beer again, then some punch, +then some more wine--the gardener had his pockets full of money. He was +very tipsy by eleven and invited me to go and have a dance with him at +the Batignolles. I refused, and asked him to escort me back to my +mistress at the upper end of the Champs Elysees. We went out of the cafe +and walked up the Rue de Rivoli, stopping every now and then for more +wine and beer. By two o'clock the fellow was so far gone that he fell +like a lump on a bench near the Arc de Triomphe, where he went to sleep; +and there I left him." + +"Well, where did you go?" + +"Home." + +"What has become of the package?" + +"Oh, I intended to throw it into the Seine, as Hector wished, but I +forgot it; you see, I had drunk almost as much as the gardener--so I +carried it back home with me, and it is in my room now." + +"Have you opened it?" + +"Well--what do you think?" + +"What did it contain?" + +"A hammer, two other tools and a large knife." + +Guespin's innocence was now evident, and the detective's foresight was +realized. + +"Guespin's all right," said M. Plantat. "But we must know--" + +M. Lecoq interrupted him; he knew now all he wished. Jenny could tell +him nothing more, so he suddenly changed his tone from a wheedling one +to abrupt severity. + +"My fine young woman," said he, "you have saved an innocent man, but you +must repeat what you have just said to the judge of instruction at +Corbeil. And as you might lose yourself on the way, I'll give you a +guide." + +He went to the window and opened it; perceiving Goulard on the sidewalk, +he cried out to him: + +"Goulard, come up here." + +He turned to the astonished Jenny, who was so frightened that she dared +not either question him or get angry, and said: + +"Tell me how much Tremorel paid you for the service you rendered him." + +"Ten thousand francs; but it is my due, I swear to you; for he promised +it to me long ago, and owed it to me." + +"Very good; it can't be taken away from you." He added, pointing out +Goulard who entered just then: "Go with this man to your room, take the +package which Guespin brought you, and set out at once for Corbeil. +Above all, no tricks, Miss--or beware of me!" + +Mme. Charman came in just in time to see Jenny leave the room with +Goulard. + +"Lord, what's the matter?" she asked M. Lecoq. + +"Nothing, my dear Madame, nothing that concerns you in the least. And +so, thank you and good-evening; we are in a great hurry." + + + + +XXVI + + +When M. Lecoq was in a hurry he walked fast. He almost ran down the Rue +Notre Dame de Lorette, so that Plantat had great difficulty in keeping +up with him; and as he went along he pursued his train of reflection, +half aloud, so that his companion caught here and there a snatch of it. + +"All goes well," he muttered, "and we shall succeed. It's seldom that a +campaign which commences so well ends badly. If Job is at the wine +merchant's, and if one of my men has succeeded in his search, the crime +of Valfeuillu is solved, and in a week people will have forgotten it." + +He stopped short on reaching the foot of the street opposite the church. + +"I must ask you to pardon me," said he to the old justice, "for hurrying +you on so and making you one of my trade; but your assistance might have +been very useful at Madame Charman's, and will be indispensable when we +get fairly on Tremorel's track." + +They went across the square and into the wine shop at the corner of the +Rue des Martyrs. Its keeper was standing behind his counter turning wine +out of a large jug into some litres, and did not seem much astonished at +seeing his new visitors. M. Lecoq was quite at home (as he was +everywhere), and spoke to the man with an air of easy familiarity. + +"Aren't there six or eight men waiting for somebody here?" he asked. + +"Yes, they came about an hour ago." + +"Are they in the big back room?" + +"Just so, Monsieur," responded the wine merchant, obsequiously. + +He didn't exactly know who was talking to him, but he suspected him to +be some superior officer from the prefecture; and he was not surprised +to see that this distinguished personage knew the ins and outs of his +house. He opened the door of the room referred to without hesitation. +Ten men in various guises were drinking there and playing cards. On M. +Lecoq's entrance with M. Plantat, they respectfully got up and took off +their hats. + +"Good for you, Job," said M. Lecoq to him who seemed to be their chief, +"you are prompt, and it pleases me. Your ten men will be quite enough, +for I shall have the three besides whom I sent out this morning." + +M. Job bowed, happy at having pleased a master who was not very prodigal +in his praises. + +"I want you to wait here a while longer," resumed M. Lecoq, "for my +orders will depend on a report which I am expecting." He turned to the +men whom he had sent out among the upholsterers: + +"Which of you was successful?" + +"I, Monsieur," replied a big white-faced fellow, with insignificant +mustaches. + +"What, you again, Palot? really, my lad, you are lucky. Step into this +side room--first, though, order a bottle of wine, and ask the proprietor +to see to it that we are not disturbed." + +These orders were soon executed, and M. Plantat being duly ensconced +with them in the little room, the detective turned the key. + +"Speak up now," said he to Palot, "and be brief." + +"I showed the photograph to at least a dozen upholsterers without any +result; but at last a merchant in the Faubourg St. Germain, named Rech, +recognized it." + +"Tell me just what he said, if you can." + +"He told me that it was the portrait of one of his customers. A month +ago this customer came to him to buy a complete set of +furniture--drawing-room, dining-room, bed-room, and the rest--for a +little house which he had just rented. He did not beat him down at all, +and only made one condition to the purchase, and that was, that +everything should be ready and in place, and the curtains and carpets +put in, within three weeks from that time; that is a week ago last +Monday." + +"And what was the sum-total of the purchase?" + +"Eighteen thousand francs, half paid down in advance, and half on the +day of delivery." + +"And who carried the last half of the money to the upholsterer?" + +"A servant." + +"What name did this customer give?" + +"He called himself Monsieur James Wilson; but Monsieur Rech said he did +not seem like an English-man." + +"Where does he live?" + +"The furniture was carried to a small house, No. 34 Rue St. Lazare, near +the Havre station." + +M. Lecoq's face, which had up to that moment worn an anxious expression, +beamed with joy. He felt the natural pride of a captain who has +succeeded in his plans for the enemy's destruction. He tapped the old +justice of the peace familiarly on the shoulder, and pronounced a single +word: + +"Nipped!" + +Palot shook his head. + +"It isn't certain," said he. + +"Why?" + +"You may imagine, Monsieur Lecoq, that when I got the address, having +some time on my hands, I went to reconnoitre the house." + +"Well?" + +"The tenant's name is really Wilson, but it's not the man of the +photograph, I'm certain." + +M. Plantat gave a groan of disappointment, but M. Lecoq was not so +easily discouraged. + +"How did you find out?" + +"I pumped one of the servants." + +"Confound you!" cried M. Plantat. "Perhaps you roused suspicions." + +"Oh, no," answered M. Lecoq. "I'll answer for him. Palot is a pupil of +mine. Explain yourself, Palot." + +"Recognizing the house--an elegant affair it is, too--I said to myself: +'I' faith, here's the cage; let's see if the bird is in it.' I luckily +happened to have a napoleon in my pocket; and I slipped it without +hesitation into the drain which led from the house to the +street-gutter." + +"Then you rang?" + +"Exactly. The porter--there is a porter--opened the door, and with my +most vexed air I told him how, in pulling out my handkerchief, I had +dropped a twenty-franc piece in the drain, and begged him to lend me +something to try to get it out. He lent me a poker and took another +himself, and we got the money out with no difficulty; I began to jump +about as if I were delighted, and begged him to let me treat him to a +glass of wine." + +"Not bad." + +"Oh, Monsieur Lecoq, it is one of your tricks, you know. My porter +accepted my invitation, and we soon got to be the best friends in the +world over some wine in a shop just across the street from the house. We +were having a jolly talk together when, all of a sudden, I leaned over +as if I had just espied something on the floor, and picked up--the +photograph, which I had dropped and soiled a little with my foot. +'What,' cried I, 'a portrait?' My new friend took it, looked at it, and +didn't seem to recognize it. Then, to be certain, I said, 'He's a very +good-looking fellow, ain't he now? Your master must be some such a man.' +But he said no, that the photograph was of a man who was bearded, while +his master was as clean-faced as an abbe. 'Besides,' he added, 'my +master is an American; he gives us our orders in French, but Madame and +he always talk English together.'" + +M. Lecoq's eye glistened as Palot proceeded. + +"Tremorel speaks English, doesn't he?" asked he of M. Plantat. + +"Quite well; and Laurence too." + +"If that is so, we are on the right track, for we know that Tremorel +shaved his beard off on the night of the murder. We can go on--" + +Palot meanwhile seemed a little uneasy at not receiving the praise he +expected. + +"My lad," said M. Lecoq, turning to him, "I think you have done +admirably, and a good reward shall prove it to you. Being ignorant of +what we know, your conclusions were perfectly right. But let's go to the +house at once; have you got a plan of the ground-floor?" + +"Yes, and also of the first floor above. The porter was not dumb, and so +he gave me a good deal of information about his master and mistress, +though he has only been there two days. The lady is dreadfully +melancholy, and cries all the time." + +"We know it; the plan--" + +"Below, there is a large and high paved arch for the carriages to pass +through; on the other side is a good-sized courtyard, at the end of +which are the stable and carriage-house. The porter's lodge is on the +left of the arch; on the right a glass door opens on a staircase with +six steps, which conducts to a vestibule into which the drawing-room, +dining-room, and two other little rooms open. The chambers are on the +first floor, a study, a--" + +"Enough," M. Lecoq said, "my plan is made." + +And rising abruptly, he opened the door, and followed by M. Plantat and +Palot, went into the large room. All the men rose at his approach as +before. + +"Monsieur Job," said the detective, "listen attentively to what I have +to say. As soon as I am gone, pay up what you owe here, and then, as I +must have you all within reach, go and install yourselves in the first +wine-shop on the right as you go up the Rue d'Amsterdam. Take your +dinner there, for you will have time--but soberly, you understand." + +He took two napoleons out of his pocket and placed them on the table, +adding: + +"That's for the dinner." + +M. Lecoq and the old justice went into the street, followed closely by +Palot. The detective was anxious above all to see for himself the house +inhabited by Tremorel. He saw at a glance that the interior must be as +Palot had described. + +"That's it, undoubtedly," said he to M. Plantat; "we've got the game in +our hands. Our chances at this moment are ninety to ten." + +"What are you going to do?" asked the justice, whose emotion increased +as the decisive moment approached. + +"Nothing, just yet, I must wait for night before I act. As it is two +hours yet before dark, let's imitate my men; I know a restaurant just by +here where you can dine capitally; we'll patronize it." + +And without awaiting a reply, he led M. Plantat to a restaurant in the +Passage du Havre. But at the moment he was about to open the door, he +stopped and made a signal. Palot immediately appeared. + +"I give you two hours to get yourself up so that the porter won't +recognize you, and to have some dinner. You are an upholsterer's +apprentice. Now clear out; I shall wait for you here." + +M. Lecoq was right when he said that a capital dinner was to be had in +the Passage du Havre; unfortunately M. Plantat was not in a state to +appreciate it. As in the morning, he found it difficult to swallow +anything, he was so anxious and depressed. He longed to know the +detective's plans; but M. Lecoq remained impenetrable, answering all +inquiries with: + +"Let me act, and trust me." + +M. Plantat's confidence was indeed very great; but the more he +reflected, the more perilous and difficult seemed the attempt to save +Tremorel from a trial. The most poignant doubts troubled and tortured +his mind. His own life was at stake; for he had sworn to himself that he +would not survive the ruin of Laurence in being forced to confess in +full court her dishonor and her love for Hector. + +M. Lecoq tried hard to make his companion eat something, to take at +least some soup and a glass of old Bordeaux; but he soon saw the +uselessness of his efforts and went on with his dinner as if he were +alone. He was very thoughtful, but any uncertainty of the result of his +plans never entered his head. He drank much and often, and soon emptied +his bottle of Leoville. Night having now come on the waiters began to +light the chandeliers, and the two friends found themselves almost +alone. + +"Isn't it time to begin?" asked the old justice, timidly. + +"We have still nearly an hour," replied M. Lecoq, consulting his watch; +"but I shall make my preparations now." + +He called a waiter, and ordered a cup of coffee and writing materials. + +"You see," said he, while they were waiting to be served, "we must try +to get at Laurence without Tremorel's knowing it. We must have a ten +minutes' talk with her alone, and in the house. That is a condition +absolutely necessary to our success." + +M. Plantat had evidently been expecting some immediate and decisive +action, for M. Lecoq's remark filled him with alarm. + +"If that's so," said he mournfully, "it's all over with our project." + +"How so?" + +"Because Tremorel will not leave Laurence by herself for a moment." + +"Then I'll try to entice him out." + +"And you, you who are usually so clear-sighted, really think that he +will let himself be taken in by a trick! You don't consider his +situation at this moment. He must be a prey to boundless terrors. We +know that Sauvresy's declaration will not be found, but he does not; he +thinks that perhaps it has been found, that suspicions have been +aroused, and that he is already being searched for and pursued by the +police." + +"I've considered all that," responded M. Lecoq with a triumphant smile, +"and many other things besides. Well, it isn't easy to decoy Tremorel +out of the house. I've been cudgelling my brain about it a good deal, +and have found a way at last. The idea occurred to me just as we were +coming in here. The Count de Tremorel, in an hour from now, will be in +the Faubourg St. Germain. It's true it will cost me a forgery, but you +will forgive me under the circumstances. Besides, he who seeks the end +must use the means." + +He took up a pen, and as he smoked his cigar, rapidly wrote the +following: + +"MONSIEUR WILSON: + +"Four of the thousand-franc notes which you paid me are counterfeits; I +have just found it out by sending them to my banker's. If you are not +here to explain the matter before ten o'clock, I shall be obliged to put +in a complaint this evening before the procureur. + +"RECH." + +"Now," said M. Lecoq, passing the letter to his companion. "Do you +comprehend?" + +The old justice read it at a glance and could not repress a joyful +exclamation, which caused the waiters to turn around and stare at him. + +"Yes," said he, "this letter will catch him; it'll frighten him out of +all his other terrors. He will say to himself that he might have slipped +some counterfeit notes among those paid to the upholsterer, that a +complaint against him will provoke an inquiry, and that he will have to +prove that he is really Monsieur Wilson or he is lost." + +"So you think he'll come out?" + +"I'm sure of it, unless he has become a fool." + +"I tell you we shall succeed then, for this is the only serious +obstacle--" + +He suddenly interrupted himself. The restaurant door opened ajar, and a +man passed his head in and withdrew it immediately. + +"That's my man," said M. Lecoq, calling the waiter to pay for the +dinner, "he is waiting for us in the passage; let us go." + +A young man dressed like a journeyman upholsterer was standing in the +passage looking in at the shop-windows. He had long brown locks, and his +mustache and eyebrows were coal-black. M. Plantat certainly did not +recognize him as Palot, but M. Lecoq did, and even seemed dissatisfied +with his get-up. + +"Bad," growled he, "pitiable. Do you think it is enough, in order to +disguise yourself, to change the color of your beard? Look in that +glass, and tell me if the expression of your face is not just what it +was before? Aren't your eye and smile the same? Then your cap is too +much on one side, it is not natural; and your hand is put in your pocket +awkwardly." + +"I'll try to do better another time, Monsieur Lecoq," Palot modestly +replied. + +"I hope so; but I guess your porter won't recognize you to-night, and +that is all we want." + +"And now what must I do?" + +"I'll give you your orders; and be very careful not to blunder. First, +hire a carriage, with a good horse; then go to the wine-shop for one of +our men, who will accompany you to Monsieur Wilson's house. When you get +there ring, enter alone and give the porter this letter, saying that it +is of the utmost importance. This done, put yourself with your companion +in ambuscade before the house. If Monsieur Wilson goes out--and he will +go out or I am not Lecoq--send your comrade to me at once. As for you, +you will follow Monsieur Wilson and not lose sight of him. He will take +a carriage, and you will follow him with yours, getting up on the +hackman's seat and keeping a lookout from there. Have your eyes open, +for he is a rascal who may feel inclined to jump out of his cab and +leave you in pursuit of an empty vehicle." + +"Yes, and the moment I am informed--" + +"Silence, please, when I am speaking. He will probably go to the +upholsterer's in the Rue des Saints-Peres, but I may be mistaken. He may +order himself to be carried to one of the railway stations, and may take +the first train which leaves. In this case, you must get into the same +railway carriage that he does, and follow him everywhere he goes; and be +sure and send me a despatch as soon as you can." + +"Very well, Monsieur Lecoq; only if I have to take a train--" + +"What, haven't you any money?" + +"Well--no, my chief." + +"Then take this five-hundred-franc note; that's more than is necessary +to make the tour of the world. Do you comprehend everything?" + +"I beg your pardon--what shall I do if Monsieur Wilson simply returns to +his house?" + +"In that case I will finish with him. If he returns, you will come back +with him, and the moment his cab stops before the house give two loud +whistles, you know. Then wait for me in the street, taking care to +retain your cab, which you will lend to Monsieur Plantat if he needs +it." + +"All right," said Palot, who hastened off without more ado. + +M. Plantat and the detective, left alone, began to walk up and down the +gallery; both were grave and silent, as men are at a decisive moment; +there is no chatting about a gaming-table. M. Lecoq suddenly started; he +had just seen his agent at the end of the gallery. His impatience was so +great that he ran toward him, saying: + +"Well?" + +"Monsieur, the game has flown, and Palot after him!" + +"On foot or in a cab?" + +"In a cab." + +"Enough. Return to your comrades, and tell them to hold themselves +ready." + +Everything was going as Lecoq wished, and he grasped the old justice's +hand, when he was struck by the alteration in his features. + +"What, are you ill?" asked he, anxiously. + +"No, but I am fifty-five years old, Monsieur Lecoq, and at that age +there are emotions which kill one. Look, I am trembling at the moment +when I see my wishes being realized, and I feel as if a disappointment +would be the death of me. I'm afraid, yes, I'm afraid. Ah, why can't I +dispense with following you?" + +"But your presence is indispensable; without your help I can do +nothing:" + +"What could I do?" + +"Save Laurence, Monsieur Plantat." + +This name restored a part of his courage. + +"If that is so--" said he. He began to walk firmly toward the street, +but M. Lecoq stopped him. + +"Not yet," said the detective, "not yet; the battle now depends on the +precision of our movements. A single fault miserably upsets all my +combinations, and then I shall be forced to arrest and deliver up the +criminal. We must have a ten minutes' interview with Mademoiselle +Laurence, but not much more, and it is absolutely necessary that this +interview should be suddenly interrupted by Tremorel's return. Let's +make our calculations. It will take the rascal half an hour to go to the +Rue des Saints-Peres, where he will find nobody; as long to get back; +let us throw in fifteen minutes as a margin; in all, an hour and a +quarter. There are forty minutes left us." + +M. Plantat did not reply, but his companion said that he could not stay +so long on his feet after the fatigues of the day, agitated as he was, +and having eaten nothing since the evening before. He led him into a +neighboring cafe, and forced him to eat a biscuit and drink a glass of +wine. Then seeing that conversation would be annoying to the unhappy old +man, he took up an evening paper and soon seemed to be absorbed in the +latest news from Germany. The old justice, his head leaning on the back +of his chair and his eyes wandering over the ceiling, passed in mental +review the events of the past four years. It seemed to him but yesterday +that Laurence, still a child, ran up his garden-path and picked his +roses and honeysuckles. How pretty she was, and how divine were her +great eyes! Then, as it seemed, between dusk and dawn, as a rose blooms +on a June night, the pretty child had become a sweet and radiant young +girl. She was timid and reserved with all but him--was he not her old +friend, the confidant of all her little griefs and her innocent hopes? +How frank and pure she was then; what a heavenly ignorance of evil! + +Nine o'clock struck; M. Lecoq laid down his paper. + +"Let us go," said he. + +M. Plantat followed him with a firmer step, and they soon reached M. +Wilson's house, accompanied by Job and his men. + +"You men," said M. Lecoq, "wait till I call before you go in; I will +leave the door ajar." + +He rang; the door swung open; and M. Plantat and the detective went in +under the arch. The porter was on the threshold of his lodge. + +"Monsieur Wilson?" asked M. Lecoq. + +"He is out." + +"I will speak to Madame, then." + +"She is also out." + +"Very well. Only, as I must positively speak with Madame Wilson, I'm +going upstairs." + +The porter seemed about to resist him by force; but, as Lecoq now called +in his men, he thought better of it and kept quiet. + +M. Lecoq posted six of his men in the court, in such a position that +they could be easily seen from the windows on the first floor, and +instructed the others to place themselves on the opposite sidewalk, +telling them to look ostentatiously at the house. These measures taken, +he returned to the porter. + +"Attend to me, my man. When your master, who has gone out, comes in +again, beware that you don't tell him that we are upstairs; a single +word would get you into terribly hot water--" + +"I am blind," he answered, "and deaf." + +"How many servants are there in the house?" + +"Three; but they have all gone out." + +The detective then took M. Plantat by the arm, and holding him firmly: + +"You see, my dear friend," said he, "the game is ours. Come along--and +in Laurence's name, have courage!" + + + + +XXVII + + +All M. Lecoq's anticipations were realized. Laurence was not dead, and +her letter to her parents was an odious trick. It was really she who +lived in the house as Mme. Wilson. How had the lovely young girl, so +much beloved by the old justice, come to such a dreadful extremity? The +logic of life, alas, fatally enchains all our determinations to each +other. Often an indifferent action, little wrongful in itself, is the +beginning of an atrocious crime. Each of our new resolutions depends +upon those which have preceded it, and is their logical sequence just as +the sum-total is the product of the added figures. Woe to him who, being +seized with a dizziness at the brink of the abyss, does not fly as fast +as possible, without turning his head; for soon, yielding to an +irresistible attraction, he approaches, braves the danger, slips, and is +lost. Whatever thereafter he does or attempts he will roll down the +faster, until he reaches the very bottom of the gulf. + +Tremorel had by no means the implacable character of an assassin; he was +only feeble and cowardly; yet he had committed abominable crimes. All +his guilt came from the first feeling of envy with which he regarded +Sauvresy, and which he had not taken the pains to subdue. Laurence, +when, on the day that she became enamoured of Tremorel, she permitted +him to press her hand, and kept it from her mother, was lost. The +hand-pressure led to the pretence of suicide in order to fly with her +lover. It might also lead to infanticide. + +Poor Laurence, when she was left alone by Hector's departure to the +Faubourg St. Germain, on receiving M. Lecoq's letter, began to reflect +upon the events of the past year. How unlooked-for and rapidly +succeeding they had been! It seemed to her that she had been whirled +along in a tempest, without a second to think or act freely. She asked +herself if she were not a prey to some hideous nightmare, and if she +should not presently awake in her pretty maidenly chamber at Orcival. +Was it really she who was there in a strange house, dead to everyone, +leaving behind a withered memory, reduced to live under a false name, +without family or friends henceforth, or anyone in the world to help her +feebleness, at the mercy of a fugitive like herself, who was free to +break to-morrow the bonds of caprice which to-day bound him to her? Was +it she, too, who was about to become a mother, and found herself +suffering from the excessive misery of blushing for that maternity which +is the pride of pure young wives? A thousand memories of her past life +flocked through her brain and cruelly revived her despair. Her heart +sank as she thought of her old friendships, of her mother, her sister, +the pride of her innocence, and the pure joys of the home fireside. + +As she half reclined on a divan in Hector's library, she wept freely. +She bewailed her life, broken at twenty, her lost youth, her vanished, +once radiant hopes, the world's esteem, and her own self-respect, which +she should never recover. + +Of a sudden the door was abruptly opened. + +Laurence thought it was Hector returned, and she hastily rose, passing +her handkerchief across her face to try to conceal her tears. + +A man whom she did not know stood upon the threshold, respectfully +bowing. She was afraid, for Tremorel had said to her many times within +the past two days, "We are pursued; let us hide well;" and though it +seemed to her that she had nothing to fear, she trembled without knowing +why. + +"Who are you?" she asked, haughtily, "and who has admitted you here? +What do you want?" + +M. Lecoq left nothing to chance or inspiration; he foresaw everything, +and regulated affairs in real life as he would the scenes in a theatre. +He expected this very natural indignation and these questions, and was +prepared for them. The only reply he made was to step one side, thus +revealing M. Plantat behind him. + +Laurence was so much overcome on recognizing her old friend, that, in +spite of her resolution, she came near falling. + +"You!" she stammered; "you!" + +The old justice was, if possible, more agitated than Laurence. Was that +really his Laurence there before him? Grief had done its work so well +that she seemed old. + +"Why did you seek for me?" she resumed. "Why add another grief to my +life? Ah, I told Hector that the letter he dictated to me would not be +believed. There are misfortunes for which death is the only refuge." + +M. Plantat was about to reply, but Lecoq was determined to take the lead +in the interview. + +"It is not you, Madame, that we seek," said he, "but Monsieur de +Tremorel." + +"Hector! And why, if you please? Is he not free?" + +M. Lecoq hesitated before shocking the poor girl, who had been but too +credulous in trusting to a scoundrel's oaths of fidelity. But he thought +that the cruel truth is less harrowing than the suspense of intimations. + +"Monsieur de Tremorel," he answered, "has committed a great crime." + +"He! You lie, sir." + +The detective sorrowfully shook his head. + +"Unhappily I have told you the truth. Monsieur de Tremorel murdered his +wife on Wednesday night. I am a detective and I have a warrant to arrest +him." + +He thought this terrible charge would overwhelm Laurence; he was +mistaken. She was thunderstruck, but she stood firm. The crime horrified +her, but it did not seem to her entirely improbable, knowing as she did +the hatred with which Hector was inspired by Bertha. + +"Well, perhaps he did," cried she, sublime in her energy and despair; "I +am his accomplice, then--arrest me." + +This cry, which seemed to proceed from the most senseless passion, +amazed the old justice, but did not surprise M. Lecoq. + +"No, Madame," he resumed, "you are not this man's accomplice. Besides, +the murder of his wife is the least of his crimes. Do you know why he +did not marry you? Because in concert with Bertha, he poisoned Monsieur +Sauvresy, who saved his life and was his best friend. We have the proof +of it." + +This was more than poor Laurence could bear; she staggered and fell upon +a sofa. But she did not doubt the truth of what M. Lecoq said. This +terrible revelation tore away the veil which, till then, had hidden the +past from her. The poisoning of Sauvresy explained all Hector's conduct, +his position, his fears, his promises, his lies, his hate, his +recklessness, his marriage, his flight. Still she tried not to defend +him, but to share the odium of his crimes. + +"I knew it," she stammered, in a voice broken by sobs, "I knew it all." + +The old justice was in despair. + +"How you love him, poor child!" murmured he. + +This mournful exclamation restored to Laurence all her energy; she made +an effort and rose, her eyes glittering with indignation: + +"I love him!" cried she. "I! Ah, I can explain my conduct to you, my old +friend, for you are worthy of hearing it. Yes, I did love him, it is +true--loved him to the forgetfulness of duty, to self-abandonment. But +one day he showed himself to me as he was; I judged him, and my love did +not survive my contempt. I was ignorant of Sauvresy's horrible death. +Hector confessed to me that his life and honor were in Bertha's +hands--and that she loved him. I left him free to abandon me, to marry, +thus sacrificing more than my life to what I thought was his happiness; +yet I was not deceived. When I fled with him I once more sacrificed +myself, when I saw that it was impossible to conceal my shame. I wanted +to die. I lived, and wrote an infamous letter to my mother, and yielded +to Hector's prayers, because he pleaded with me in the name of my--of +our child!" + +M. Lecoq, impatient at the loss of time, tried to say something; but +Laurence would not listen to him. + +"But what matter?" she continued. "I loved him, followed him, and am +his! Constancy at all hazards is the only excuse for a fault like mine. +I will do my duty. I cannot be innocent when Hector has committed a +crime; I desire to suffer half the punishment." + +She spoke with such remarkable animation that the detective despaired of +calming her, when two whistles in the street struck his ear. Tremorel +was returning and there was not a moment to be lost. He suddenly seized +Laurence by the arm. + +"You will tell all this to the judges, Madame," said he, sternly. "My +orders are only for M. de Tremorel. Here is the warrant to arrest him." + +He took out the warrant and laid it upon the table. Laurence, by the +force of her will, had become almost calm. + +"You will let me speak five minutes with the Count de Tremorel, will you +not?" she asked. + +M. Lecoq was delighted; he had looked for this request, and expected it. + +"Five minutes? Yes," he replied. "But abandon all hope, Madame, of +saving the prisoner; the house is watched; if you look in the court and +in the street you will see my men in ambuscade. Besides, I am going to +stay here in the next room." + +The count was heard ascending the stairs. + +"There's Hector!" cried Laurence, "quick, quick! conceal yourselves!" + +She added, as they were retiring, in a low tone, but not so low as to +prevent the detective from hearing her: + +"Be sure, we will not try to escape." + +She let the door-curtain drop; it was time. Hector entered. He was paler +than death, and his eyes had a fearful, wandering expression. + +"We are lost!" said he, "they are pursuing us. See, this letter which I +received just now is not from the man whose signature it professes to +bear; he told me so himself. Come, let us go, let us leave this house--" + +Laurence overwhelmed him with a look full of hate and contempt, and +said: + +"It is too late." + +Her countenance and voice were so strange that Tremorel, despite his +distress, was struck by it, and asked: + +"What is the matter?" + +"Everything is known; it is known that you killed your wife." + +"It's false!" + +She shrugged her shoulders. + +"Well, then, it is true," he added, "for I loved you so--" + +"Really! And it was for love of me that you poisoned Sauvresy?" + +He saw that he was discovered, that he had been caught in a trap, that +they had come, in his absence, and told Laurence all. He did not attempt +to deny anything. + +"What shall I do?" cried he, "what shall I do?" + +Laurence drew him to her, and muttered in a shuddering voice: + +"Save the name of Tremorel; there are pistols here." + +He recoiled, as if he had seen death itself. + +"No," said he. "I can yet fly and conceal myself; I will go alone, and +you can rejoin me afterward." + +"I have already told you that it is too late. The police have surrounded +the house. And--you know--it is the galleys, or--the scaffold!" + +"I can get away by the courtyard." + +"It is guarded; look." + +He ran to the window, saw M. Lecoq's men, and returned half mad and +hideous with terror. + +"I can at least try," said he, "by disguising myself--" + +"Fool! A detective is in there, and it was he who left that warrant to +arrest you on the table." + +He saw that he was lost beyond hope. + +"Must I die, then?" he muttered. + +"Yes, you must; but before you die write a confession of your crimes, +for the innocent may be suspected--" + +He sat down mechanically, took the pen which Laurence held out to him, +and wrote: + +"Being about to appear before God, I declare that I alone, and without +accomplices, poisoned Sauvresy and murdered the Countess de Tremorel, my +wife." + +When he had signed and dated this, Laurence opened a bureau drawer; +Hector seized one of the brace of pistols which were lying in it, and +she took the other. But Tremorel, as before at the hotel, and then in +the dying Sauvresy's chamber, felt his heart fail him as he placed the +pistol against his forehead. He was livid, his teeth chattered, and he +trembled so violently that he let the pistol drop. + +"Laurence, my love," he stammered, "what will--become of you?" + +"Me! I have sworn that I will follow you always and everywhere. Do you +understand?" + +"Ah, 'tis horrible!" said he. "It was not I who poisoned Sauvresy--it +was she--there are proofs of it; perhaps, with a good advocate--" + +M. Lecoq did not lose a word or a gesture of this tragical scene. Either +purposely or by accident, he pushed the door-curtain, which made a +slight noise. + +Laurence thought the door was being opened, that the detective was +returning, and that Hector would fall alive into their hands. + +"Miserable coward!" she cried, pointing her pistol at him, "shoot, or +else--" + +He hesitated; there was another rustle at the door; she fired. + +Tremorel fell dead. + +Laurence, with a rapid movement, took up the other pistol, and was +turning it against herself, when M. Lecoq sprung upon her and tore the +weapon from her grasp. + +"Unhappy girl!" cried he, "what would you do?" + +"Die. Can I live now?" + +"Yes, you can live," responded M. Lecoq. "And more, you ought to live." + +"I am a lost woman--" + +"No, you are a poor child lured away by a wretch. You say you are very +guilty; perhaps so; live to repent of it. Great sorrows like yours have +their missions in this world, one of devotion and charity. Live, and the +good you do will attach you once more to life. You have yielded to the +deceitful promises of a villain. Remember, when you are rich, that there +are poor innocent girls forced to lead a life of miserable shame for a +morsel of bread. Go to these unhappy creatures, rescue them from +debauchery, and their honor will be yours." + +M. Lecoq narrowly watched Laurence as he spoke, and perceived that he +had touched her. Still, her eyes were dry, and were lit up with a +strange light. + +"Besides, your life is not your own--you know." + +"Ah," she returned, "I must die now, even for my child, if I would not +die of shame when he asks for his father--" + +"You will reply, Madame, by showing him an honest man and an old friend, +who is ready to give him his name--Monsieur Plantat." + +The old justice was broken with grief; yet he had the strength to say: + +"Laurence, my beloved child, I beg you accept me--" + +These simple words, pronounced with infinite gentleness and sweetness, +at last melted the unhappy young girl, and determined her. She burst +into tears. + +She was saved. + +M. Lecoq hastened to throw a shawl which he saw on a chair about her +shoulders, and passed her arm through M. Plantat's, saying to the +latter: + +"Go, lead her away; my men have orders to let you pass, and Palot will +lend you his carriage." + +"But where shall we go?" + +"To Orcival; Monsieur Courtois has been informed by a letter from me +that his daughter is living, and he is expecting her. Come, lose no +time." + +M. Lecoq, when he was left alone, listened to the departure of the +carriage which took M. Plantat and Laurence away; then he returned to +Tremorel's body. + +"There," said he to himself, "lies a wretch whom I have killed instead +of arresting and delivering him up to justice. Have I done my duty? No; +but my conscience will not reproach me, because I have acted rightly." + +And running to the staircase, he called his men. + + + + +XXVIII + + +The day after Tremorel's death, old Bertaud and Guespin were set at +liberty, and received, the former four thousand francs to buy a boat and +new tackle, and the latter ten thousand francs, with a promise of a like +sum at the end of the year, if he would go and live in his own province. +Fifteen days later, to the great surprise of the Orcival gossips, who +had never learned the details of these events, M. Plantat wedded Mlle. +Laurence Courtois; and the groom and bride departed that very evening +for Italy, where it was announced they would linger at least a year. + +As for Papa Courtois, he has offered his beautiful domain at Orcival for +sale; he proposes to settle in the middle of France, and is on the +lookout for a commune in need of a good mayor. + +M. Lecoq, like everybody else, would, doubtless, have forgotten the +Valfeuillu affair, had it not been that a notary called on him +personally the other morning with a very gracious letter from Laurence, +and an enormous sheet of stamped paper. This was no other than a title +deed to M. Plantat's pretty estate at Orcival, "with furniture, stable, +carriage-house, garden, and other dependencies and appurtenances +thereunto belonging," and some neighboring acres of pleasant fields. + +"Prodigious!" cried M. Lecoq. "I didn't help ingrates, after all! I am +willing to become a landed proprietor, just for the rarity of the +thing." + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Mystery of Orcival, by Emile Gaboriau + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY OF ORCIVAL *** + +***** This file should be named 1651.txt or 1651.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1651/ + +Produced by An Anonymous Volunteer + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END* + + + + + +This Etext was prepared by one of our anonymous volunteers. + + + + + +The Mystery of Orcival + +by Emile Gaboriau + + + + +I + + +On Thursday, the 9th of July, 186-, Jean Bertaud and his son, well +known at Orcival as living by poaching and marauding, rose at three +o'clock in the morning, just at daybreak, to go fishing. + +Taking their tackle, they descended the charming pathway, shaded +by acacias, which you see from the station at Evry, and which leads +from the burg of Orcival to the Seine. + +They made their way to their boat, moored as usual some fifty yards +above the wire bridge, across a field adjoining Valfeuillu, the +imposing estate of the Count de Tremorel. + +Having reached the river-bank, they laid down their tackle, and +Jean jumped into the boat to bail out the water in the bottom. + +While he was skilfully using the scoop, he perceived that one of +the oar-pins of the old craft, worn by the oar, was on the point +of breaking. + +"Philippe," cried he, to his son, who was occupied in unravelling +a net, "bring me a bit of wood to make a new oar-pin." + +"All right," answered Philippe. + +There was no tree in the field. The young man bent his steps toward +the park of Valfeuillu, a few rods distant; and, neglectful of +Article 391 of the Penal Code, jumped across the wide ditch which +surrounds M. de Tremorel's domain. He thought he would cut off a +branch of one of the old willows, which at this place touch the +water with their drooping branches. + +He had scarcely drawn his knife from his pocket, while looking +about him with the poacher's unquiet glance, when he uttered a low +cry, "Father! Here! Father!" + +"What's the matter?" responded the old marauder, without pausing +from his work. + +"Father, come here!" continued Philippe. "In Heaven's name, come +here, quick!" + +Jean knew by the tone of his son's voice that something unusual had +happened. He threw down his scoop, and, anxiety quickening him, in +three leaps was in the park. He also stood still, horror-struck, +before the spectacle which had terrified Philippe. + +On the bank of the river, among the stumps and flags, was stretched +a woman's body. Her long, dishevelled locks lay among the +water-shrubs; her dress--of gray silk--was soiled with mire and +blood. All the upper part of the body lay in shallow water, and +her face had sunk in the mud. + +"A murder!" muttered Philippe, whose voice trembled. + +"That's certain," responded Jean, in an indifferent tone. "But who +can this woman be? Really one would say, the countess." + +"We'll see," said the young man. He stepped toward the body; his +father caught him by the arm. + +"What would you do, fool?" said he. "You ought never to touch the +body of a murdered person without legal authority." + +"You think so?" + +"Certainly. There are penalties for it." + +"Then, come along and let's inform the Mayor." + +"Why? as if people hereabouts were not against us enough already! +Who knows that they would not accuse us--" + +"But, father--" + +"If we go and inform Monsieur Courtois, he will ask us how and why +we came to be in Monsieur de Tremorel's park to find this out. What +is it to you, that the countess has been killed? They'll find her +body without you. Come, let's go away." + +But Philippe did not budge. Hanging his head, his chin resting +upon his palm, he reflected. + +"We must make this known," said he, firmly. "We are not savages; +we will tell Monsieur Courtois that in passing along by the park in +our boat, we perceived the body." + +Old Jean resisted at first; then, seeing that his son would, if +need be, go without him, yielded. + +They re-crossed the ditch, and leaving their fishing-tackle in the +field, directed their steps hastily toward the mayor's house. + +Orcival, situated a mile or more from Corbeil, on the right bank +of the Seine, is one of the most charming villages in the environs +of Paris, despite the infernal etymology of its name. The gay and +thoughtless Parisian, who, on Sunday, wanders about the fields, +more destructive than the rook, has not yet discovered this smiling +country. The distressing odor of the frying from coffee-gardens +does not there stifle the perfume of the honeysuckles. The refrains +of bargemen, the brazen voices of boat-horns, have never awakened +echoes there. Lazily situated on the gentle slopes of a bank washed +by the Seine, the houses of Orcival are white, and there are +delicious shades, and a bell-tower which is the pride of the place. +On all sides vast pleasure domains, kept up at great cost, surround +it. From the upper part, the weathercocks of twenty chateaux may +be seen. On the right is the forest of Mauprevoir, and the pretty +country-house of the Countess de la Breche; opposite, on the other +side of the river, is Mousseaux and Petit-Bourg, the ancient domain +of Aguado, now the property of a famous coach-maker; on the left, +those beautiful copses belong to the Count de Tremorel, that large +park is d'Etiolles, and in the distance beyond is Corbeil; that vast +building, whose roofs are higher than the oaks, is the Darblay mill. + +The mayor of Orcival occupies a handsome, pleasant mansion, at the +upper end of the village. Formerly a manufacturer of dry goods, M. +Courtois entered business without a penny, and after thirty years +of absorbing toil, he retired with four round millions of francs. + +Then he proposed to live tranquilly with his wife and children, +passing the winter at Paris and the summer at his country-house. + +But all of a sudden he was observed to be disturbed and agitated. +Ambition stirred his heart. He took vigorous measures to be +forced to accept the mayoralty of Orcival. And he accepted it, +quite in self-defence, as he will himself tell you. This office +was at once his happiness and his despair; apparent despair, +interior and real happiness. + +It quite befits him, with clouded brow, to rail at the cares of +power; he appears yet better when, his waist encircled with the +gold-laced scarf, he goes in triumph at the head of the municipal +body. + +Everybody was sound asleep at the mayor's when the two Bertauds +rapped the heavy knocker of the door. After a moment, a servant, +half asleep, appeared at one of the ground-floor windows. + +"What's the matter, you rascals?" asked he, growling. + +Jean did not think it best to revenge an insult which his +reputation in the village too well justified. + +"We want to speak to Monsieur the Mayor," he answered. "There is +terrible need of it. Go call him, Monsieur Baptiste; he won't +blame you." + +"I'd like to see anybody blame me," snapped out Baptiste. + +It took ten minutes of talking and explaining to persuade the +servant. Finally, the Bertauds were admitted to a little man, fat +and red, very much annoyed at being dragged from his bed so early. +It was M. Courtois. + +They had decided that Philippe should speak. + +"Monsieur Mayor," he said, "we have come to announce to you a great +misfortune. A crime has been committed at Monsieur de Tremorel's." + +M. Courtois was a friend of the count's; he became whiter than his +shirt at this sudden news. + +"My God!" stammered he, unable to control his emotion, "what do you +say--a crime!" + +"Yes; we have just discovered a body; and as sure as you are here, +I believe it to be that of the countess." + +The worthy man raised his arms heavenward, with a wandering air. + +"But where, when?" + +"Just now, at the foot of the park, as we were going to take up +our nets." + +"It is horrible!" exclaimed the good M. Courtois; "what a calamity! +So worthy a lady! But it is not possible--you must be mistaken; +I should have been informed--" + +"We saw it distinctly, Monsieur Mayor." + +"Such a crime in my village! Well, you have done wisely to come +here. I will dress at once, and will hasten off--no, wait." He +reflected a moment, then called: + +"Baptiste!" + +The valet was not far off. With ear and eye alternately pressed +against the key-hole, he heard and looked with all his might. At +the sound of his master's voice he had only to stretch out his hand +and open the door. + +"Monsieur called me?" + +"Run to the justice of the peace," said the mayor. "There is not +a moment to lose. A crime has been committed--perhaps a murder-- +you must go quickly. And you," addressing the poachers, "await +me here while I slip on my coat." + +The justice of the peace at Orcival, M. Plantat--"Papa Plantat," +as he was called--was formerly an attorney at Melun. At fifty, +Mr. Plantat, whose career had been one of unbroken prosperity, +lost in the same month, his wife, whom he adored, and his two sons, +charming youths, one eighteen, the other twenty-two years old. +These successive losses crushed a man whom thirty years of happiness +left without defence against misfortune. For a long time his reason +was despaired of. Even the sight of a client, coming to trouble his +grief, to recount stupid tales of self-interest, exasperated him. +It was not surprising that he sold out his professional effects and +good-will at half price. He wished to establish himself at his ease +in his grief, with the certainty of not being disturbed in its +indulgence. + +But the intensity of his mourning diminished, and the ills of +idleness came. The justiceship of the peace at Orcival was vacant, +and M. Plantat applied for and obtained it. Once installed in this +office, he suffered less from ennui. This man, who saw his life +drawing to an end, undertook to interest himself in the thousand +diverse cases which came before him. He applied to these all the +forces of a superior intelligence, the resources of a mind admirably +fitted to separate the false from the true among the lies he was +forced to hear. He persisted, besides, in living alone, despite +the urging of M. Courtois; pretending that society fatigued him, +and that an unhappy man is a bore in company. + +Misfortune, which modifies characters, for good or bad, had made +him, apparently, a great egotist. He declared that he was only +interested in the affairs of life as a critic tired of its active +scenes. He loved to make a parade of his profound indifference +for everything, swearing that a rain of fire descending upon Paris, +would not even make him turn his head. To move him seemed +impossible. "What's that to me?" was his invariable exclamation. + +Such was the man who, a quarter of an hour after Baptiste's +departure, entered the mayor's house. + +M. Plantat was tall, thin, and nervous. His physiognomy was not +striking. His hair was short, his restless eyes seemed always to +be seeking something, his very long nose was narrow and sharp. +After his affliction, his mouth, formerly well shaped, became +deformed; his lower lip had sunk, and gave him a deceptive look of +simplicity. + +"They tell me," said he, at the threshold, "that Madame de Tremorel +has been murdered." + +"These men here, at least, pretend so," answered the mayor, who had +just reappeared. + +M. Courtois was no longer the same man. He had had time to make +his toilet a little. His face attempted to express a haughty +coldness. He had been reproaching himself for having been wanting +in dignity, in showing his grief before the Bertauds. "Nothing +ought to agitate a man in my position," said he to himself. And, +being terribly agitated, he forced himself to be calm, cold, and +impassible. + +M. Plantat was so naturally. + +"This is a very sad event," said he, in a tone which he forced +himself to make perfectly disinterested; "but after all, how does +it concern us? We must, however, hurry and ascertain whether it +is true. I have sent for the brigadier, and he will join us." + +"Let us go," said M. Courtois; "I have my scarf in my pocket." + +They hastened off. Philippe and his father went first, the young +man eager and impatient, the old one sombre and thoughtful. The +mayor, at each step, made some exclamation. + +"I can't understand it," muttered he; "a murder in my commune! a +commune where, in the memory of men, no crime has been committed!" + +And be directed a suspicious glance toward the two Bertauds. The +road which led toward the chateau of M. de Tremorel was an +unpleasant one, shut in by walls a dozen feet high. On one side +is the park of the Marchioness de Lanascol; on the other the +spacious garden of Saint Jouan. The going and coming had taken +time; it was nearly eight o'clock when the mayor, the justice, +and their guides stopped before the gate of M. de Tremorel. + +The mayor rang. The bell was very large; only a small gravelled +court of five or six yards separated the gate from the house; +nevertheless no one appeared. + +The mayor rang more vigorously, then with all his strength; but in +vain. + +Before the gate of Mme. de Lanascol's chateau, nearly opposite, a +groom was standing, occupied in cleaning and polishing a bridle-bit. +"It's of no use to ring, gentlemen," said this man; "there's nobody +in the chateau." + +"How! nobody?" asked the mayor, surprised. + +"I mean," said the groom, "that there is no one there but the master +and mistress. The servants all went away last evening by the 8.40 +train to Paris, to the wedding of the old cook, Madame Denis. They +ought to return this morning by the first train. I was invited +myself--" + +"Great God!" interrupted M. Courtois, "then the count and countess +remained alone last night?" + +"Entirely alone, Monsieur Mayor." + +"It is horrible!" + +M. Plantat seemed to grow impatient during this dialogue. "Come," +said he, "we cannot stay forever at the gate. The gendarmes do not +come; let us send for the locksmith." Philippe was about to hasten +off, when, at the end of the road, singing and laughing were heard. +Five persons, three women and two men, soon appeared. + +"Ah, there are the people of the chateau," cried the groom, whom +this morning visit seemed to annoy, "they ought to have a key." + +The domestics, seeing the group about the gate, became silent and +hastened their steps. One of them began to run ahead of the others; +it was the count's valet de chambre. + +"These gentlemen perhaps wish to speak to Monsieur the Count?" +asked he, having bowed to M. Plantat. + +"We have rung five times, as hard as we could," said the mayor. + +"It is surprising," said the valet de chambre, "the count sleeps +very lightly. Perhaps he has gone out." + +"Horror!" cried Philippe. "Both of them have been murdered!" These +words shocked the servants, whose gayety announced a reasonable +number of healths drunk to the happiness of the newly wedded pair. +M. Courtois seemed to be studying the attitude of old Bertaud. + +"A murder!" muttered the valet de chambre. "It was for money then; +it must have been known--" + +"What?" asked the mayor. + +"Monsieur the Count received a very large sum yesterday morning." + +"Large! yes," added a chambermaid. "He had a large package of +bank-bills. Madame even said to Monsieur that she should not shut +her eyes the whole night, with this immense sum in the house." + +There was a silence; each one looked at the others with a frightened +air. M. Courtois reflected. + +"At what hour did you leave the chateau last evening?" asked he of +the servants. + +"At eight o'clock; we had dinner early." + +"You went away all together?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"You did not leave each other?" + +"Not a minute." + +"And you returned all together?" + +The servants exchanged a significant look. + +"All," responded a chambermaid--"that is to say, no. One left us +on reaching the Lyons station at Paris; it was Guespin." + +"Yes, sir; he went away, saying that he would rejoin us at Wepler's, +in the Batignolles, where the wedding took place." The mayor +nudged the justice with his elbow, as if to attract his attention, +and continued to question the chambermaid. + +"And this Guespin, as you call him--did you see him again?" + +"No, sir. I asked several times during the evening in vain, what +had become of him; his absence seemed to me suspicious." Evidently +the chambermaid tried to show superior perspicacity. A little more, +and she would have talked of presentiments. + +"Has this Guespin been long in the house?" + +"Since spring." + +"What were his duties?" + +"He was sent from Paris by the house of the 'Skilful Gardener,' to +take care of the rare flowers in Madame's conservatory." + +"And did he know of this money?" + +The domestics again exchanged significant glances. + +"Yes," they answered in chorus, "we had talked a great deal about +it among ourselves." + +The chambermaid added: "He even said to me, 'To think that Monsieur +the Count has enough money in his cabinet to make all our fortunes.'" + +"What kind of a man is this?" + +This question absolutely extinguished the talkativeness of the +servants. No one dared to speak, perceiving that the least word +might serve as the basis of a terrible accusation. But the groom +of the house opposite, who burned to mix himself up in the affair, +had none of these scruples. "Guespin," answered he, "is a good +fellow. Lord, what jolly things he knows! He knows everything +you can imagine. It appears he has been rich in times past, and if +he wished--But dame! he loves to have his work all finished, and +go off on sprees. He's a crack billiard-player, I can tell you." + +Papa Plantat, while listening in an apparently absent-minded way +to these depositions, or rather these scandals, carefully examined +the wall and the gate. He now turned, and interrupting the groom: + +"Enough of this," said he, to the great scandal of M. Courtois. +"Before pursuing this interrogatory, let us ascertain the crime, +if crime there is; for it is not proved. Let whoever has the key, +open the gate." + +The valet de chambre had the key; he opened the gate, and all +entered the little court. The gendarmes had just arrived. The +mayor told the brigadier to follow him, and placed two men at the +gate, ordering them not to permit anyone to enter or go out, +unless by his orders. Then the valet de chambre opened the door +of the house. + + + + +II + + +If there had been no crime, at least something extraordinary had +taken place at the chateau; the impassible justice might have +been convinced of it, as soon as he had stepped into the +vestibule. The glass door leading to the garden was wide open, +and three of the panes were shattered into a thousand pieces. The +carpeting of waxed canvas between the doors had been torn up, and +on the white marble slabs large drops of blood were visible. At +the foot of the staircase was a stain larger than the rest, and +upon the lowest step a splash hideous to behold. + +Unfitted for such spectacles, or for the mission he had now to +perform, M. Courtois became faint. Luckily, he borrowed from the +idea of his official importance, an energy foreign to his character. +The more difficult the preliminary examination of this affair +seemed, the more determined he was to carry it on with dignity. + +"Conduct us to the place where you saw the body," said he to +Bertaud. But Papa Plantat intervened. + +"It would be wiser, I think," he objected, "and more methodical, +to begin by going through the house." + +"Perhaps--yes--true, that's my own view," said the mayor, grasping at +the other's counsel, as a drowning man clings to a plank. And he +made all retire excepting the brigadier and the valet de chambre, +the latter remaining to serve as guide. "Gendarmes," cried he to +the men guarding the gate, "see to it that no one goes out; prevent +anybody from entering the house, and above all, let no one go into +the garden." + +Then they ascended the staircase. Drops of blood were sprinkled +all along the stairs. There was also blood on the baluster, and M. +Courtois perceived, with horror, that his hands were stained. + +When they had reached the first landing-stage, the mayor said to +the valet de chambre: + +"Tell me, my friend, did your master and mistress occupy the same +chamber?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"And where is their chamber?" + +"There, sir." + +As he spoke, the valet de chambre staggered back terrified, and +pointed to a door, the upper panel of which betrayed the imprint +of a bloody hand. Drops of perspiration overspread the poor +mayor's forehead he too was terrified, and could hardly keep on +his feet. Alas, authority brings with it terrible obligations! +The brigadier, an old soldier of the Crimea, visibly moved, +hesitated. + +M. Plantat alone, as tranquil as if he were in his garden, retained +his coolness, and looked around upon the others. + +"We must decide," said he. + +He entered the room; the rest followed. + +There was nothing unusual in the apartment; it was a boudoir hung +in blue satin, furnished with a couch and four arm-chairs, covered +also with blue satin. One of the chairs was overturned. + +They passed on to the bed-chamber. + +A frightful disorder appeared in this room. There was not an +article of furniture, not an ornament, which did not betray that a +terrible, enraged and merciless struggle had taken place between +the assassins and their victims. In the middle of the chamber a +small table was overturned, and all about it were scattered lumps +of sugar, vermilion cups, and pieces of porcelain. + +"Ab!" said the valet de chambre, "Monsieur and Madame were taking +tea when the wretches came in!" + +The mantel ornaments had been thrown upon the floor; the clock, +in falling, had stopped at twenty minutes past three. Near the +clock were the lamps; the globes were in pieces, the oil had been +spilled. + +The canopy of the bed had been torn down, and covered the bed. +Someone must have clutched desperately at the draperies. All the +furniture was overturned. The coverings of the chairs had been +hacked by strokes of a knife, and in places the stuffing protruded. +The secretary had been broken open; the writing-slide, dislocated, +hung by its hinges; the drawers were open and empty, and everywhere, +blood--blood upon the carpet, the furniture, the curtains--above +all, upon the bed-curtains. + +"Poor wretches!" stammered the mayor. "They were murdered here." + +Every one for a moment was appalled. But meanwhile, the justice of +the peace devoted himself to a minute scrutiny, taking notes upon +his tablets, and looking into every corner. When he had finished: + +"Come," said he, "let us go into the other rooms." + +Every where there was the same disorder. A band of furious maniacs, +or criminals seized with a frenzy, had certainly passed the night +in the house. + +The count's library, especially, had been turned topsy-turvy. The +assassins had not taken the trouble to force the locks; they had +gone to work with a hatchet. Surely they were confident of not +being overheard; for they must have struck tremendous blows to make +the massive oaken bureau fly in pieces. + +Neither parlor nor smoking-room had been respected. Couches, chairs, +canopies were cut and torn as if they had been lunged at with swords. +Two spare chambers for guests were all in confusion. + +They then ascended to the second story. + +There, in the first room which they penetrated, they found, beside +a trunk which had been assaulted, but which was not opened, a +hatchet for splitting wood which the valet de chambre recognized as +belonging to the house. + +"Do you understand now?" said the mayor to M. Plantat. "The +assassins were in force, that's clear. The murder accomplished, +they scattered through the chateau, seeking everywhere the money +they knew they would find here. One of them was engaged in breaking +open this trunk, when the others, below, found the money; they +called him; he hastened down, and thinking all further search +useless, he left the hatchet here." + +"I see it," said the brigadier, "just as if I had been here." + +The ground-floor, which they next visited, had been respected. +Only, after the crime had been committed, and the money secured, +the murderers had felt the necessity of refreshing themselves. +They found the remains of their supper in the dining-room. They +had eaten up all the cold meats left in the cupboard. On the +table, beside eight empty bottles of wine and liqueurs, were ranged +five glasses. + +"There were five of them," said the mayor. + +By force of will, M. Courtois had recovered his self-possession. + +"Before going to view the bodies," said he, "I will send word to +the procureur of Corbeil. In an hour, we will have a judge of +instruction, who will finish our painful task." + +A gendarme was instructed to harness the count's buggy, and to +hasten to the procureur. Then the mayor and the justice, followed +by the brigadier, the valet de chambre, and the two Bertauds, took +their way toward the river. + +The park of Valfeuillu was very wide from right to left. From the +house to the Seine it was almost two hundred steps. Before the +house was a grassy lawn, interspersed with flower-beds. Two paths +led across the lawn to the river-bank. + +But the murderers had not followed the paths. Making a short cut, +they had gone straight across the lawn. Their traces were perfectly +visible. The grass was trampled and stamped down as if a heavy load +had been dragged over it. In the midst of the lawn they perceived +something red; M. Plantat went and picked it up. It was a slipper, +which the valet de chambre recognized as the count's. Farther on, +they found a white silk handkerchief, which the valet declared he +had often seen around the count's neck. This handkerchief was +stained with blood. + +At last they arrived at the river-bank, under the willows from +which Philippe had intended to cut off a branch; there they saw the +body. The sand at this place was much indented by feet seeking a +firm support. Everything indicated that here had been the supreme +struggle. + +M. Courtois understood all the importance of these traces. + +"Let no one advance," said he, and, followed by the justice of the +peace, he approached the corpse. Although the face could not be +distinguished, both recognized the countess. Both had seen her in +this gray robe, adorned with blue trimmings. + +Now, how came she there? + +The mayor thought that having succeeded in escaping from the hands +of the murderers, she had fled wildly. They had pursued her, had +caught up with her there, and she had fallen to rise no more. This +version explained the traces of the struggle. It must have been +the count's body that they had dragged across the lawn. + +M. Courtois talked excitedly, trying to impose his ideas on the +justice. But M. Plantat hardly listened; you might have thought +him a hundred leagues from Valfeuillu; he only responded by +monosyllables--yes, no, perhaps. And the worthy mayor gave +himself great pains; he went and came, measured steps, minutely +scrutinized the ground. + +There was not at this place more than a foot of water. A mud-bank, +upon which grew some clumps of flags and some water-lilies, +descended by a gentle decline from the bank to the middle of the +river. The water was very clear, and there was no current; the +slippery and slimy mire could be distinctly seen. + +M. Courtois had gone thus far in his investigations, when he was +struck by a sudden idea. + +"Bertaud," said he, "come here." + +The old poacher obeyed. + +"You say that you saw the body from your boat?" + +"Yes, Monsieur Mayor." + +"Where is your boat?" + +"There, hauled up to that field." + +"Well, lead us to it." + +It was clear to all that this order had a great effect upon the man. +He trembled and turned pale under his rough skin, tanned as it was +by sun and storm. He was even seen to cast a menacing look toward +his son. + +"Let us go," said he at last. + +They were returning to the house when the valet proposed to pass +over the ditch. "That will be the quickest way," said he, "I will +go for a ladder which we will put across." + +He went off, and quickly reappeared with his improvised foot-bridge. +But at the moment he was adjusting it, the mayor cried out to him: + +"Stop!" + +The imprints left by the Bertauds on both sides of the ditch had +just caught his eye. + +"What is this?" said he; "evidently someone has crossed here, and +not long ago; for the traces of the steps are quite fresh." + +After an examination of some minutes he ordered that the ladder +should be placed farther off. When they had reached the boat, he +said to Jean, "Is this the boat with which you went to take up your +nets this morning?" + +"Yes." + +"Then," resumed M. Courtois, "what implements did you use? your +cast net is perfectly dry; this boat-hook and these oars have not +been wet for twenty-four hours." + +The distress of the father and son became more and more evident. + +"Do you persist in what you say, Bertaud?" said the mayor. + +"Certainly." + +"And you, Philippe?" + +"Monsieur," stammered the young man, "we have told the truth." + +"Really!" said M. Courtois, in an ironical tone. "Then you will +explain to the proper authorities how it was that you could see +anything from a boat which you had not entered. It will be proved +to you, also, that the body is in a position where it is impossible +to see it from the middle of the river. Then you will still have +to tell what these foot-prints on the grass are, which go from your +boat to the place where the ditch has been crossed several times +and by several persons." + +The two Bertauds hung their heads. + +"Brigadier," ordered the mayor, "arrest these two men in the name +of the law, and prevent all communication between them." + +Philippe seemed to be ill. As for old Jean, he contented himself +with shrugging his shoulders and saying to his son: + +"Well, you would have it so, wouldn't you?" + +While the brigadier led the two poachers away, and shut them up +separately, and under the guard of his men, the justice and the +mayor returned to the park. "With all this," muttered M. Courtois, +"no traces of the count." + +They proceeded to take up the body of the countess. The mayor sent +for two planks, which, with a thousand precautions, they placed on +the ground, being able thus to move the countess without effacing +the imprints necessary for the legal examination. Alas! it was +indeed she who had been the beautiful, the charming Countess de +Tremorel! Here were her smiling face, her lovely, speaking eyes, +her fine, sensitive mouth. + +There remained nothing of her former self. The face was +unrecognizable, so soiled and wounded was it. Her clothes were in +tatters. Surely a furious frenzy had moved the monsters who had +slain the poor lady! She had received more than twenty +knife-wounds, and must have been struck with a stick, or rather +with a hammer; she had been dragged by her feet and by her hair! + +In her left hand she grasped a strip of common cloth, torn, +doubtless, from the clothes of one of the assassins. The mayor, +in viewing the spectacle, felt his legs fail him, and supported +himself on the arm of the impassible Plantat. + +"Let us carry her to the house," said the justice, "and then we +will search for the count." + +The valet and brigadier (who had now returned) called on the +domestics for assistance. The women rushed into the garden. +There was then a terrible concert of cries, lamentations, and +imprecations. + +"The wretches! So noble a mistress! So good a lady!" + +M. and Mme. de Tremorel, one could see, were adored by their people. + +The countess had just been laid upon the billiard-table, on the +ground-floor, when the judge of instruction and a physician were +announced. + +"At last!" sighed the worthy mayor; and in a lower tone he added, +"the finest medals have their reverse." + +For the first time in his life, he seriously cursed his ambition, +and regretted being the most important personage in Orcival. + + + + +III + + +The judge of instruction of the tribunal at Corbeil, was M. Antoine +Domini, a remarkable man, since called to higher functions. He was +forty years of age, of a prepossessing person, and endowed with a +very expressive, but too grave physiognomy. In him seemed typified +the somewhat stiff solemnity of the magistracy. Penetrated with the +dignity of his office, he sacrificed his life to it, rejecting the +most simple distractions, and the most innocent pleasures. + +He lived alone, seldom showing himself abroad; rarely received his +friends, not wishing, as he said, that the weaknesses of the man +should derogate from the sacred character of the judge. This latter +reason had deterred him from marrying, though he felt the need of a +domestic sphere. + +Always and everywhere he was the magistrate--that is, the +representative, even to fanaticism, of what he thought the most +august institution on the earth. Naturally gay, he would +double-lock himself in when he wished to laugh. He was witty; but +if a bright sally escaped him, you may be sure he repented of it. +Body and soul he gave to his vocation; and no one could bring more +conscientiousness to the discharge of what he thought to be his +duty. He was also inflexible. It was monstrous, in his eyes, to +discuss an article of the code. The law spoke; it was enough; he +shut his eyes, covered his ears, and obeyed. + +From the day when a legal investigation commenced, he did not sleep, +and he employed every means to discover the truth. Yet he was not +regarded as a good judge of instruction; to contend by tricks with +a prisoner was repugnant to him; to lay a snare for a rogue he +thought debasing; in short, he was obstinate--obstinate to +foolishness, sometimes to absurdity; even to denying the existence +of the sun at mid-day. + +The mayor and Papa Plantat hastened to meet M. Domini. He bowed +to them gravely, as if he had not known them, and presenting to +them a man of some sixty years who accompanied him: + +"Messieurs," said he, "this is Doctor Gendron." + +Papa Plantat shook hands with the doctor; the mayor smiled +graciously at him, for Dr. Gendron was well-known in those parts; +he was even celebrated, despite the nearness of Paris. Loving his +art and exercising it with a passionate energy, he yet owed his +renown less to his science than his manners. People said: "He is +an original;" they admired his affectation of independence, of +scepticism, and rudeness. He made his visits from five to nine in +the morning--all the worse for those for whom these hours were +inconvenient. After nine o'clock the doctor was not to be had. +The doctor was working for himself, the doctor was in his +laboratory, the doctor was inspecting his cellar. It was rumored +that he sought for secrets of practical chemistry, to augment still +more his twenty thousand livres of income. And he did not deny it; +for in truth he was engaged on poisons, and was perfecting an +invention by which could be discovered traces of all the alkaloids +which up to that time had escaped analysis. If his friends +reproached him, even jokingly, on sending away sick people in the +afternoon, he grew red with rage. + +"Parbleu!" he answered, "I find you superb! I am a doctor four +hours in the day. I am paid by hardly a quarter of my patients-- +that's three hours I give daily to humanity, which I despise. +Let each of you do as much, and we shall see." + +The mayor conducted the new-comers into the drawing-room, where he +installed himself to write down the results of his examination. + +"What a misfortune for my town, this crime!" said he to M. Domini. +"What shame! Orcival has lost its reputation." + +"I know nothing of the affair," returned the judge. "The gendarme +who went for me knew little about it." + +M. Courtois recounted at length what his investigation had +discovered, not forgetting the minutest detail, dwelling especially +on the excellent precautions which he had had the sagacity to take. +He told how the conduct of the Bertauds had at first awakened his +suspicions; how he had detected them, at least in a pointblank lie; +how, finally, he had determined to arrest them. He spoke standing, +his head thrown back, with wordy emphasis. The pleasure of +speaking partially rewarded him for his recent distress. + +"And now," he concluded, "I have just ordered the most exact search, +so that doubtless we shall find the count's body. Five men, +detailed by me, and all the people of the house, are searching the +park. If their efforts are not crowned with success, I have here +some fishermen who will drag the river." + +M. Domini held his tongue, only nodding his head from time to time, +as a sign of approbation. He was studying, weighing the details +told him, building up in his mind a plan of proceeding. + +"You have acted wisely," said he, at last. "The misfortune is a +great one, but I agree with you that we are on the track of the +criminals. These poachers, or the gardener who has disappeared, +have something, perhaps, to do with this abominable crime." + +Already, for some minutes, M. Plantat had rather awkwardly concealed +some signs of impatience. + +"The misfortune is," said he, "that if Guespin is guilty, he will +not be such a fool as to show himself here." + +"Oh, we'll find him," returned M. Domini. "Before leaving Corbeil, +I sent a despatch to the prefecture of police at Paris, to ask for +a police agent, who will doubtless be here shortly." + +"While waiting," proposed the mayor, "perhaps you would like to see +the scene of the crime?" + +M. Domini made a motion as if to rise; then sat down again. + +"In fact, no," said he; "we will see nothing till the agent arrives. +But I must have some information concerning the Count and Countess +de Tremorel." + +The worthy mayor again triumphed. + +"Oh, I can give it to you," answered he quickly, "better than +anybody. Ever since their advent here, I may say, I have been one +of their best friends. Ah, sir, what charming people! excellent, +and affable, and devoted--" + +And at the remembrance of all his friends' good qualities, M. +Courtois choked in his utterance. + +"The Count de Tremorel," he resumed, "was a man of thirty-four +years, handsome, witty to the tips of his nails. He had sometimes, +however, periods of melancholy, during which he did not wish to see +anybody; but he was ordinarily so affable, so polite, so obliging; +he knew so well how to be noble without haughtiness, that everybody +here esteemed and loved him." + +"And the countess?" asked the judge of instruction. + +"An angel, Monsieur, an angel on earth! Poor lady! You will soon +see her remains, and surely you would not guess that she has been +the queen of the country, by reason of her beauty." + +"Were they rich?" + +"Yes; they must have had, together, more than a hundred thousand +francs income--oh, yes, much more; for within five or six months +the count, who had not the bucolic tastes of poor Sauvresy, sold +some lands to buy consols." + +"Have they been married long?" + +M. Courtois scratched his head; it was his appeal to memory. + +"Faith," he answered, "it was in September of last year; just six +months ago. I married them myself. Poor Sauvresy had been dead a +year." + +The judge of instruction looked up from his notes with a surprised +air. + +"Who is this Sauvresy," he inquired, "of whom you speak?" + +Papa Plantat, who was furiously biting his nails in a corner, +apparently a stranger to what was passing, rose abruptly. + +"Monsieur Sauvresy," said he, "was the first husband of Madame de +Tremorel. My friend Courtois has omitted this fact." + +"Oh!" said the mayor, in a wounded tone, "it seems to me that under +present circumstances--" + +"Pardon me," interrupted the judge. "It is a detail such as may +well become valuable, though apparently foreign to the case, and +at the first view, insignificant." + +"Hum!" grunted Papa Plantat. "Insignificant--foreign to it!" + +His tone was so singular, his air so strange, that M. Domini was +struck by it. + +"Do you share," he asked, "the opinion of the mayor regarding the +Tremorels?" + +Plantat shrugged his shoulders. + +"I haven't any opinions," he answered: "I live alone--see nobody; +don't disturb myself about anything. But--" + +"It seems to me," said M. Courtois, "that nobody should be better +acquainted with people who were my friends than I myself." + +"Then, you are telling the story clumsily," said M. Plantat, dryly. + +The judge of instruction pressed him to explain himself. So M. +Plantat, without more ado, to the great scandal of the mayor, who +was thus put into the background, proceeded to dilate upon the main +features of the count's and countess's biography. + +"The Countess de Tremorel, nee Bertha Lechaillu, was the daughter +of a poor village school-master. At eighteen, her beauty was +famous for three leagues around, but as she only had for dowry her +great blue eyes and blond ringlets, but few serious lovers presented +themselves. Already Bertha, by advice of her family, had resigned +herself to take a place as a governess--a sad position for so +beautiful a maid--when the heir of one of the richest domains in +the neighborhood happened to see her, and fell in love with her. + +"Clement Sauvresy was just thirty; he had no longer any family, +and possessed nearly a hundred thousand livres income from lands +absolutely free of incumbrance. Clearly, he had the best right in +the world to choose a wife to his taste. He did not hesitate. He +asked for Bertha's hand, won it, and, a month after, wedded her at +mid-day, to the great scandal of the neighboring aristocracy, who +went about saying: 'What folly! what good is there in being rich, +if it is not to double one's fortune by a good marriage!' + +"Nearly a month before the marriage, Sauvresy set the laborers to +work at Valfeuillu, and in no long time had spent, in repairs and +furniture, a trifle of thirty thousand crowns. The newly married +pair chose this beautiful spot in which to spend their honeymoon. +They were so well-contented there that they established themselves +permanently at Valfeuillu, to the great satisfaction of the +neighborhood. + +"Bertha was one of those persons, it seemed, who are born especially +to marry millionnaires. Without awkwardness or embarrassment, she +passed easily from the humble school-room, where she had assisted +her father, to the splendid drawing-room of Valfeuillu. And when +she did the honors of her chateau to all the neighboring aristocracy, +it seemed as though she had never done anything else. She knew how +to remain simple, approachable, modest, all the while that she took +the tone of the highest society. She was beloved." + +"But it appears to me," interrupted the mayor, "that I said the +same thing, and it was really not worth while--" + +A gesture from M. Domini closed his mouth, and M. Plantat continued: + +"Sauvresy was also liked, for he was one of those golden hearts +which know not how to suspect evil. He was one of those men with +a robust faith, with obstinate illusions, whom doubts never disturb. +He was one of those who thoroughly confide in the sincerity of +their friends, in the love of their mistresses. This new domestic +household ought to be happy; it was so. Bertha adored her husband-- +that frank man, who, before speaking to her a word of love, +offered her his hand. Sauvresy professed for his wife a worship +which few thought foolish. They lived in great style at Valfeuillu. +They received a great deal. When autumn came all the numerous spare +chambers were filled. The turnouts were magnificent. + +"Sauvresy had been married two years, when one evening he brought +from Paris one of his old and intimate friends, a college comrade +of whom he had often spoken, Count Hector de Tremorel. The count +intended to remain but a short time at Valfeuillu; but weeks passed +and then months, and he still remained. It was not surprising. +Hector had passed a very stormy youth, full of debauchery, of clubs, +of gambling, and of amours. He had thrown to the winds of his +caprices an immense fortune; the relatively calm life of Valfeuillu +was a relief. At first people said to him, 'You will soon have +enough of the country.' He smiled, but said nothing. It was then +thought, and rightly, perhaps, that having become poor, he cared +little to display his ruin before those who had obscured his +splendor. He absented himself rarely, and then only to go to +Corbeil, almost always on foot. There he frequented the Belle Image +hotel, the best in the town, and met, as if by chance, a young lady +from Paris. They spent the afternoon together, and separated when +the last train left." + +"Peste!" growled the mayor, "for a man who lives alone, who sees +nobody, who would not for the world have anything to do with other +people's business, it seems to me our dear Monsieur Plantat is +pretty well informed." + +Evidently M. Courtois was jealous. How was it that he, the first +personage in the place, had been absolutely ignorant of these +meetings? His ill-humor was increasing, when Dr. Gendron answered: + +"Pah! all Corbeil prated about that at the time." + +M. Plantat made a movement with his lips as if to say, "I know +other things besides." He went on, however, with his story. + +"The visit of Count Hector made no change in the habits at the +chateau. Monsieur and Madame Sauvresy had a brother; that was all. +Sauvresy at this time made several journeys to Paris, where, as +everybody knew, he was engaged in arranging his friend's affairs. + +"This charming existence lasted a year. Happiness seemed to be +fixed forever beneath the delightful shades of Valfeuillu. But +alas! one evening on returning from the hunt, Sauvresy became so +ill that he was forced to take to his bed. A doctor was called; +inflammation of the chest had set in. Sauvresy was young, +vigorous as an oak; his state did not at first cause anxiety. +A fortnight afterward, in fact, he was up and about. But he was +imprudent and had a relapse. He again nearly recovered; a week +afterward there was another relapse, and this time so serious, +that a fatal end of his illness was foreseen. During this long +sickness, the love of Bertha and the affection of Tremorel for +Sauvresy were tenderly shown. Never was an invalid tended with +such solicitude--surrounded with so many proofs of the purest +devotion. His wife and his friend were always at his couch, +night and day. He had hours of suffering, but never a second of +weariness. He repeated to all who went to see him, that he had +come to bless his illness. He said to himself, 'If I had not +fallen ill, I should never have known how much I was beloved.'" + +"He said the same thing to me," interrupted the mayor, "more than a +hundred times. He also said so to Madame Courtois, to Laurence, +my eldest daughter--" + +"Naturally," continued M. Plantat. "But Sauvresy's distemper was +one against which the science of the most skilful physicians and +the most constant care contend in vain. + +"He said that he did not suffer much, but he faded perceptibly, and +was no more than the shadow of his former self. At last, one night, +toward two or three o'clock, he died in the arms of his wife and +his friend. Up to the last moment, he had preserved the full force +of his faculties. Less than an hour before expiring, he wished +everyone to be awakened, and that all the servants of the castle +should be summoned. When they were all gathered about the bedside, +he took his wife's hand, placed it in that of the Count de Tremorel, +and made them swear to marry each other when he was no more. Bertha +and Hector began to protest, but he insisted in such a manner as to +compel assent, praying and adjuring them, and declaring that their +refusal would embitter his last moments. This idea of the marriage +between his widow and his friend seems, besides, to have singularly +possessed his thoughts toward the close of his life. In the +preamble of his will, dictated the night before his death, to M. +Bury, notary of Orcival, he says formally that their union is his +dearest wish, certain as he is of their happiness, and knowing well +that his memory will be piously kept." + +"Had Monsieur and Madame Sauvresy no children?" asked the judge of +instruction. + +"No," answered the mayor. + +M. Plantat continued: + +"The grief of the count and the young widow was intense. M. de +Tremorel, especially, seemed absolutely desperate, and acted like a +madman. The countess shut herself up, forbidding even those whom +she loved best from entering her chamber--even Madame Courtois. +When the count and Madame Bertha reappeared, they were scarcely to +be recognized, so much had both changed. Monsieur Hector seemed +to have grown twenty years older. Would they keep the oath made at +the death-bed of Sauvresy, of which everyone was apprised? This +was asked with all the more curiosity, because their profound +sorrow for a man who well merited it, was admired." + +The judge of instruction stopped M. Plantat with a motion of his +hand. + +"Do you know," asked he, "whether the rendezvous at the Hotel Belle +Image had ceased?" + +"I suppose so, sir; I think so." + +"I am almost sure of it," said Dr. Gendron. "I have often heard +it said--they know everything at Corbeil--that there was a heated +explanation between M. de Tremorel and the pretty Parisian lady. +After this quarrel, they were no longer seen at the Belle Image." + +The old justice of the peace smiled. + +"Melun is not at the end of the world," said he, "and there are +hotels at Melun. With a good horse, one is soon at Fontainebleau, +at Versailles, even at Paris. Madame de Tremorel might have been +jealous; her husband had some first-rate trotters in his stables." + +Did M. Plantat give an absolutely disinterested opinion, or did he +make an insinuation? The judge of instruction looked at him +attentively, to reassure himself, but his visage expressed nothing +but a profound serenity. He told the story as he would any other, +no matter what. + +"Please go on, Monsieur," resumed M. Domini. + +"Alas!" said M. Plantat, "nothing here below is eternal, not even +grief. I know it better than anybody. Soon, to the tears of the +first days, to violent despair, there succeeded, in the count and +Madame Bertha, a reasonable sadness, then a soft melancholy. And +in one year after Sauvresy's death Monsieur de Tremorel espoused +his widow." + +During this long narrative the mayor had several times exhibited +marks of impatience. At the end, being able to hold in no longer, +he exclaimed: + +"There, those are surely exact details; but I question whether they +have advanced us a step in this grave matter which occupies us all-- +to find the murderers of the count and countess." + +M. Plantat, at these words, bent on the judge of instruction his +clear and deep look, as if to search his conscience to the bottom. + +"These details were indispensable," returned M. Domini, "and they +are very clear. Those rendezvous at the hotel struck me; one knows +not to what extremities jealousy might lead a woman--" + +He stopped abruptly, seeking, no doubt, some connection between the +pretty Parisian and the murderers; then resumed: + +"Now that I know the Tremorels as if I had lived with them +intimately, let us proceed to the actual facts." + +The brilliant eye of M. Plantat immediately grew dim; he opened his +lips as if to speak; but kept his peace. The doctor alone, who had +not ceased to study the old justice of the peace, remarked the sudden +change of his features. + +"It only remains," said M. Domini, "to know how the new couple lived." + +M. Courtois thought it due to his dignity to anticipate M. Plantat. + +"You ask how the new couple lived," said he hastily; "they lived in +perfect concord; nobody knows better about it than I, who was most +intimate with them. The memory of poor Sauvresy was a bond of +happiness between them; if they liked me so well, it was because I +often talked of him. Never a cloud, never a cross word. Hector-- +I called him so, familiarly, this poor, dear count--gave his +wife the tender attentions of a lover; those delicate cares, which +I fear most married people soon dispense with." + +"And the countess?" asked M. Plantat, in a tone too marked not to +be ironical. + +"Bertha?" replied the worthy mayor--"she permitted me to call her +thus, paternally--I have cited her many and many a time as an +example and model, to Madame Courtois. She was worthy of Hector +and of Sauvresy, the two most worthy men I have ever met!" + +Then, perceiving that his enthusiasm somewhat surprised his hearers, +he added, more softly: + +"I have my reasons for expressing myself thus; and I do not +hesitate to do so before men whose profession and character will +justify my discretion. Sauvresy, when living, did me a great +service--when I was forced to take the mayoralty. As for Hector, +I knew well that he had departed--from the dissipations of his +youth, and thought I discerned that he was not indifferent to my +eldest daughter, Laurence; and I dreamed of a marriage all the more +proper, as, if the Count Hector had a great name, I would give to +my daughter a dowry large enough to gild any escutcheon. Only +events modified my projects." + +The mayor would have gone on singing the praises of the Tremorels, +and his own family, if the judge of instruction had not interposed. + +"Here I am fixed," he commenced, "now, it seems to me--" + +He was interrupted by a loud noise in the vestibule. It seemed +like a struggle, and cries and shouts reached the drawing-room. +Everybody rose. + +"I know what it is," said the mayor, "only too well. They have +just found the body of the Count de Tremorel." + + + + + IV + +The mayor was mistaken. The drawing-room door opened suddenly, +and a man of slender form, who was struggling furiously, and with +an energy which would not have been suspected, appeared, held on +one side by a gendarme, and on the other by a domestic. + +The struggle had already lasted long, and his clothes were in great +disorder. His new coat was torn, his cravat floated in strips, the +button of his collar had been wrenched off, and his open shirt left +his breast bare. In the vestibule and court were heard the frantic +cries of the servants and the curious crowd--of whom there were +more than a hundred, whom the news of the crime had collected about +the gate, and who burned to hear, and above all to see. + +This enraged crowd cried: + +"It is he! Death to the assassin! It is Guespin! See him!" + +And the wretch, inspired by an immense fright, continued to struggle. + +"Help!" shouted he hoarsely. "Leave me alone. I am innocent!" + +He had posted himself against the drawing-room door, and they could +not force him forward. + +"Push him," ordered the mayor, "push him." + +It was easier to command than to execute. Terror lent to Guespin +enormous force. But it occurred to the doctor to open the second +wing of the door; the support failed the wretch, and he fell, or +rather rolled at the foot of the table at which the judge of +instruction was seated. He was straightway on his feet again, and +his eyes sought a chance to escape. Seeing none--for the windows +and doors were crowded with the lookers-on--he fell into a chair. +The fellow appeared the image of terror, wrought up to paroxysm. On +his livid face, black and blue, were visible the marks of the blows +he had received in the struggle; his white lips trembled, and he +moved his jaws as if he sought a little saliva for his burning +tongue; his staring eyes were bloodshot, and expressed the wildest +distress; his body was bent with convulsive spasms. So terrible +was this spectacle, that the mayor thought it might be an example +of great moral force. He turned toward the crowd, and pointing to +Guespin, said in a tragic tone: + +"See what crime is!" + +The others exchanged surprised looks. + +"If he is guilty," muttered M. Plantat, "why on earth has he +returned?" + +It was with difficulty that the crowd was kept back; the brigadier +was forced to call in the aid of his men. Then he returned and +placed himself beside Guespin, thinking it not prudent to leave +him alone with unarmed men. + +But the man was little to be feared. The reaction came; his +over-excited energy became exhausted, his strained muscles flaccid, +and his prostration resembled the agony of brain fever. Meanwhile +the brigadier recounted what had happened. + +"Some of the servants of the chateau and the neighboring houses were +chatting near the gate, about the crime, and the disappearance of +Guespin last night, when all of a sudden, someone perceived him at +a distance, staggering, and singing boisterously, as if he were +drunk." + +"Was he really drunk?" asked M. Domini. + +"Very," returned the brigadier. + +"Then we owe it to the wine that we have caught him, and thus all +will be explained." + +"On perceiving this wretch," pursued the gendarme, who seemed not +to have the shadow of a doubt of Guespin's guilt, "Francois, the +count's valet de chambre, and Baptiste, the mayor's servant, who +were there, hastened to meet him, and seized him. He was so tipsy +that he thought they were fooling with him. When he saw my men, +he was undeceived. Just then one of the women cried out, 'Brigand, +it was you who have this night assassinated the count and the +countess!' He immediately became paler than death, and remained +motionless and dumb. Then he began to struggle so violently that +he nearly escaped. Ah! he's strong, the rogue, although he does +not look like it." + +"And he said nothing?" said Plantat. + +"Not a word; his teeth were so tightly shut with rage that I'm sure +he couldn't say 'bread.' But we've got him. I've searched him, +and this is what I have found in his pockets: a handkerchief, a +pruning-knife, two small keys, a scrap of paper covered with +figures, and an address of the establishment of 'Vulcan's Forges.' +But that's not all--" + +The brigadier took a step, and eyed his auditors mysteriously; he +was preparing his effect. + +"That's not all. While they were bringing him along in the +court-yard, he tried to get rid of his wallet. Happily I had my +eyes open, and saw the dodge. I picked up the wallet, which he +had thrown among the flowers near the door; here it is. In it are +a one-hundred-franc note, three napoleons, and seven francs in +change. Yesterday the rascal hadn't a sou--" + +"How do you know that?" asked M. Domini. + +"Dame! Monsieur Judge, he borrowed of the valet Francois (who +told me of it) twenty-five francs, pretending that it was to pay +his share of the wedding expenses." + +"Tell Francois to come here," said the judge of instruction. "Now, +sir," he continued, when the valet presented himself, "do you know +whether Guespin had any money yesterday?" + +"He had so little, Monsieur," answered Francois promptly, "that he +asked me to lend him twenty-five francs during the day, saying that +otherwise he could not go to the wedding, not having enough even to +pay his railway fare." + +"But he might have some savings--a hundred-franc note, for +instance, which he didn't like to change." + +Francois shook his head with an incredulous smile. + +"Guespin isn't the man to have savings," said he; "Women and cards +exhaust all his wages. No longer ago than last week, the keeper of +the Cafe du Commerce came here and made a row on account of what he +owed him, and threatened to go to the count about it." + +Perceiving the effect of what he said, the valet, as if to correct +himself, hastened to add: + +"I have no ill-will toward Guespin; before to-day I've always +considered him a clever fellow, though he was too much of a +practical joker; he was, perhaps, a little proud, considering his +bringing up--" + +"You may go," said the judge, cutting the disquisition of M. +Francois short; the valet retired. + +During this colloquy, Guespin had little by little come to himself. +The judge of instruction, Plantat, and the mayor narrowly watched +the play of his countenance, which he had not the coolness to +compose, while the doctor held his pulse and counted its beating. + +"Remorse, and fear of punishment," muttered the mayor. + +"Innocence, and the impossibility of proving it," responded Plantat +in a low tone. + +M. Domini heard both these exclamations, but did not appear to take +notice of them. His opinion was not formed, and he did not wish +that anyone should be able to foretell, by any word of his, what +it would be. + +"Are you better, my friend?" asked Dr. Gendron, of Guespin. + +The poor fellow made an affirmative sign. Then, having looked +around with the anxious glance of a man who calculates a precipice +over which he has fallen, he passed his hand across his eyes and +stammered: + +"Something to drink!" + +A glass of water was brought, and he drank it at a draught, with +an expression of intense satisfaction. Then he got upon his feet. + +"Are you now in a fit state to answer me?" asked the judge. + +Guespin staggered a little, then drew himself up. He continued +erect before the judge, supporting himself against a table. The +nervous trembling of his hands diminished, the blood returned to +his cheeks, and as he listened, he arranged the disorder of his +clothes. + +"You know the events of this night, don't you?" commenced the +judge; "the Count and Countess de Tremorel have been murdered. You +went away yesterday with all the servants of the chateau; you left +them at the Lyons station about nine o'clock; you have just +returned, alone. Where have you passed the night?" + +Guespin hung his head and remained silent. + +"That is not all," continued M. Domini; "yesterday you had no money, +the fact is well known; one of your fellow-servants has just proved +it. To-day, one hundred and sixty-seven francs are found in your +wallet. Where did you get this money?" + +The unhappy creature's lip moved as if he wished to answer; a +sudden thought seemed to check him, for he did not speak. + +"More yet. What is this card of a hardware establishment that has +been found in your pocket?" + +Guespin made a sign of desperation, and stammered: + +"I am innocent." + +"I have not as yet accused you," said the judge of instruction, +quickly. "You knew, perhaps, that the count received a considerable +sum yesterday?" + +A bitter smile parted Guespin's lips as he answered: + +"I know well enough that everything is against me." + +There was a profound silence. The doctor, the mayor, and Plantat, +seized with a keen curiosity, dared not move. Perhaps nothing in +the world is more thrilling than one of these merciless duels +between justice and a man suspected of a crime. The questions may +seem insignificant, the answers irrelevant; both questions and +answers envelop terrible, hidden meanings. The smallest gesture, +the most rapid movement of physiognomy may acquire deep significance, +a fugitive light in the eye betray an advantage gained; an +imperceptible change in the voice may be confession. + +The coolness of M. Domini was disheartening. + +"Let us see," said he after a pause: "where did you pass the night? +How did you get this money? And what does this address mean?" + +"Eh!" cried Guespin, with the rage of powerlessness, "I should tell +you what you would not believe." + +The judge was about to ask another question, but Guespin cut him +short. + +"No; you wouldn't believe me," he repeated, his eyes glistening with +anger. "Do men like you believe men like me? I have a past, you +know, of antecedents, as you would say. The past! They throw that +in my face, as if, the future depended on the past. Well, yes; it's +true, I'm a debauchee, a gambler, a drunkard, an idler, but what of +it? It's true I have been before the police court, and condemned +for night poaching--what does that prove? I have wasted my life, +but whom have I wronged if not myself? My past! Have I not +sufficiently expiated it?" + +Guespin was self-possessed, and finding in himself sensations which +awoke a sort of eloquence, he expressed himself with a savage energy +well calculated to strike his hearers. + +"I have not always served others," he continued; "my father was in +easy circumstances--almost rich. He had large gardens, near +Saumur, and he passed for one of the best gardeners of that region. +I was educated, and when sixteen years old, began to study law. +Four years later they thought me a talented youth. Unhappily for +me, my father died. He left me a landed property worth a hundred +thousand francs: I sold it out for sixty thousand and went to Paris. +I was a fool then. I had the fever of pleasure-seeking, a thirst +for all sorts of pastimes, perfect health, plenty of money. I found +Paris a narrow limit for my vices; it seemed to me that the objects +of my desires were wanting. I thought my sixty thousand francs +would last forever." + +Guespin paused; a thousand memories of those times rushed into his +thoughts and he muttered: + +"Those were good times." + +"My sixty thousand francs," he resumed, "held out eight years. +Then I hadn't a sou, yet I longed to continue my way of living. +You understand, don't you? About this time, the police, one night, +arrested me. I was 'detained' six months. You will find the +records of the affair at the prefecture. Do you know what it will +tell you? It will tell you that on leaving prison I fell into that +shameful and abominable misery which exists in Paris. It will tell +you that I have lived among the worst and lowest outcasts of Paris-- +and it is the truth." + +The worthy mayor was filled with consternation. + +"Good Heaven!" thought he, "what an audacious and cynical rascal! +and to think that one is liable at any time to admit such servants +into his house!" + +The judge held his tongue. He knew that Guespin was in such a state +that, under the irresistible impulse of passion, he might betray his +innermost thoughts. + +"But there is one thing," continued the suspected man, "that the +record will not tell you; that, disgusted with this abject life, I +was tempted to suicide. It will not tell you anything of my +desperate attempts, my repentance, my relapses. At last, I was +able in part to reform. I got work; and after being in four +situations, engaged myself here. I found myself well off. I always +spent my month's wages in advance, it's true--but what would you +have? And ask if anyone has ever had to complain of me." + +It is well known that among the most intelligent criminals, those +who have had a certain degree of education, and enjoyed some good +fortune, are the most redoubtable. According to this, Guespin was +decidedly dangerous. So thought those who heard him. Meanwhile, +exhausted by his excitement, he paused and wiped his face, covered +with perspiration. + +M. Domini had not lost sight of his plan of attack. + +"All that is very well," said he, "we will return to your confession +at the proper time and place. But just now the question is, how you +spent your night, and where you got this money." + +This persistency seemed to exasperate Guespin. + +"Eh!" cried he, "how do you want me to answer? The truth? You +wouldn't credit it. As well keep silent. It is a fatality." + +"I warn you for your own sake," resumed the judge, "that if you +persist in refusing to answer, the charges which weigh upon you are +such that I will have you arrested as suspected of this murder." + +This menace seemed to have a remarkable effect on Guespin. Great +tears filled his eyes, up to that time dry and flashing, and +silently rolled down his cheeks. His energy was exhausted; he fell +on his knees, crying: + +"Mercy! I beg you, Monsieur, not to arrest me; I swear I am +innocent, I swear it!" + +"Speak, then." + +"You wish it," said Guespin, rising. Then he suddenly changed his +tone. "No, I will not speak, I cannot! One man alone could save +me; it is the count; and he is dead. I am innocent; yet if the +guilty are not found, I am lost. Everything is against me. I know +it too well. Now, do with me as you please; I will not say another +word." + +Guespin's determination, confirmed by his look, did not surprise the +judge. + +"You will reflect," said he, quietly, "only, when you have +reflected, I shall not have the same confidence in what you say +as I should have now. Possibly," and the judge spoke slowly and +with emphasis, "you have only had an indirect part in this crime; +if so--" + +"Neither indirect nor direct," interrupted Guespin; and he added, +violently, "what misery! To be innocent, and not able to defend +myself." + +"Since it is so," resumed M. Domini, "you should not object to be +placed before Mme. de Tremorel's body?" + +The accused did not seem affected by this menace. He was conducted +into the hall whither they had fetched the countess. There, he +examined the body with a cold and calm eye. He said, simply: + +"She is happier than I; she is dead, she suffers no longer; and I, +who am not guilty, am accused of her death." + +M. Domini made one more effort. + +"Come, Guespin; if in any way you know of this crime, I conjure +you, tell me. If you know the murderers, name them. Try to merit +some indulgence for your frankness and repentance." + +Guespin made a gesture as if resigned to persecution. "By all that +is most sacred," he answered, "I am innocent. Yet I see clearly +that if the murderer is not found, I am lost." + +Little by little M. Domini's conviction was formed and confirmed. +An inquest of this sort is not so difficult as may be imagined. +The difficulty is to seize at the beginning; in the entangled skein, +the main thread, which must lead to the truth through all the mazes, +the ruses, silence, falsehoods of the guilty. M. Domini was +certain that he held this precious thread. Having one of the +assassins, he knew well that he would secure the others. Our +prisons, where good soup is eaten, and good beds are provided, have +tongues, as well as the dungeons of the medieval ages. + +The judge ordered the brigadier to arrest Guespin, and told him not +to lose sight of him. He then sent for old Bertaud. This worthy +personage was not one of the people who worry themselves. He had +had so many affairs with the men of law, that one inquisition the +more disturbed him little. + +"This man has a bad reputation in my commune," whispered the mayor +to M. Domini. + +Bertaud heard it, however, and smiled. + +Questioned by the judge of instruction, he recounted very clearly +and exactly what had happened in the morning, his resistance, and +his son's determination. He explained the reason for the +falsehood they told; and here again the chapter of antecedents +came up. + +"Look here; I'm better than my reputation, after all," said he. +"There are many folks who can't say as much. You see many things +when you go about at night--enough." + +He was urged to explain his allusions, but in vain. + +When he was asked where and how he had passed the night, he +answered, that having left the cabaret at ten o'clock, he went to +put down some traps in Mauprevoir wood; and had gone home and to +bed about one o'clock. + +"By the bye," added he, "there ought to be some game in those +traps by this time." + +"Can you bring a witness to prove that you went home at one?" +asked the mayor, who bethought him of the count's clock, stopped +at twenty minutes past three. + +"Don't know, I'm sure," carelessly responded the poacher, "it's +quite likely that my son didn't wake up when I went to bed." + +He added, seeing the judge reflect: + +"I suspect that you are going to imprison me until the murderers +are discovered. If it was winter, I wouldn't complain much; a +fellow is well off in prison then, for it's warm there. But just +at the time for hunting, it's provoking. It will be a good lesson +for that Philippe; it'll teach him what it costs to render a service +to gentlefolks." + +"Enough!" interrupted M. Domini, sternly. "Do you know Guespin?" + +This name suddenly subdued the careless insolence of the marauder; +his little gray eyes experienced a singular restlessness. + +"Certainly," he answered in an embarrassed tone, "we have often made +a party at cards, you understand, while sipping our 'gloria.'"* +[* Coffee and brandy.] + +The man's inquietude struck the four who heard him. Plantat, +especially, betrayed profound surprise. The old vagabond was too +shrewd not to perceive the effect which he produced. + +"Faith, so much the worse!" cried he: "I'll tell you everything. +Every man for himself, isn't it? If Guespin has done the deed, it +will not blacken him any more, nor make him any the worse off. I +know him, simply because he used to sell me the grapes and +strawberries from the count's conservatories; I suppose he stole +them; we divided the money, and I left." + +Plantat could not refrain from an exclamation of satisfaction, as +if to say, "Good luck! I knew it well enough!" + +When he said he would be sent to prison, Bertaud was not wrong. +The judge ordered his arrest. + +It was now Philippe's turn. + +The poor fellow was in a pitiable state; he was crying bitterly. + +"To accuse me of such a crime, me!" he kept repeating. + +On being questioned he told the pure and simple truth, excusing +himself, however, for having dared to penetrate into the park. +When he was asked at what hour his father reached home, he said he +knew nothing about it; he had gone to bed about nine, and had not +awoke until morning. He knew Guespin, from having seen him at his +father's several times. He knew that the old man had some +transactions with the gardener, but he was ignorant as to what they +were. He had never spoken four times to Guespin. The judge +ordered Philippe to be set at liberty, not that he was wholly +convinced of his innocence, but because if the crime had been +committed by several persons, it was well to have one of them +free; he could be watched, and he would betray the whereabouts +of the rest. + +Meanwhile the count's body was nowhere to be found. The park had +been rigidly searched, but in vain. The mayor suggested that he +had been thrown into the river, which was also M. Domini's opinion; +and some fishermen were sent to drag the Seine, commencing their +search a little above the place where the countess was found. + +It was then nearly three o'clock. M. Plantat remarked that probably +no one had eaten anything during the day. Would it not be wise to +take something, he suggested, if the investigations were to be +pursued till night? This appeal to the trivial necessities of our +frail humanity highly displeased the worthy mayor; but the rest +readily assented to the suggestion, and M. Courtois, though not in +the least hungry, followed the general example. Around the table +which was yet wet with the wine spilt by the assassins, the judge, +M. Plantat, the mayor, and the doctor sat down, and partook of an +improvised collation. + + + + + V + +The staircase had been put under guard, but the vestibule had +remained free. People were heard coming and going, tramping and +coughing; then rising above this continuous noise, the oaths of +the gendarmes trying to keep back the crowd. From time to time, a +scared face passed by the dining-room door, which was ajar. These +were curious folks who, more daring than the rest, wished to see +the "men of justice" eating, and tried to hear a word or two, to +report them, and so become important in the eyes of the others. +But the "men of justice"--as they said at Orcival--took care to +say nothing of moment while the doors were open, and while a +servant was passing to and fro. Greatly moved by this frightful +crime, disturbed by the mystery which surrounded it, they hid +their impressions. Each, on his part, studied the probability of +his suspicions, and kept his opinion to himself. + +M. Domini, as he ate, put his notes in order, numbering the leaves, +marking certain peculiarly significant answers of the suspected +persons with a cross. He was, perhaps, the least tormented of the +four companions at this funereal repast. The crime did not seem to +him one of those which keep judges of instruction sleepless through +the night; he saw clearly the motive of it; and he had Bertaud and +Guespin, two of the assassins, or at least accomplices, secure. + +M. Plantat and Dr. Gendron, seated next each other, were talking +of the illness which carried off Sauvresy. M. Courtois listened to +the hubbub without. + +The news of the double murder was soon noised about the neighborhood, +and the crowd increased every minute. It filled the court, and +became bolder and bolder; the gendarmes were overwhelmed. Then or +never was the time for the mayor to show his authority. "I am going +to make these people listen to reason," said he, "and make them +retire." And at once, wiping his mouth, he threw his tumbled napkin +on the table, and went out. + +It was time. The brigadier's injunctions were no longer heeded. +Some curious people, more eager than the rest, had flanked the +position and were forcing an entrance through the gate leading to +the garden. The mayor's presence did not perhaps intimidate the +crowd much, but it redoubled the energy of the gendarmes; +the vestibule was cleared, amid murmurings against the arm of the +law. What a chance for a speech! M. Courtois was not wanting to +the occasion. He believed that his eloquence, endowed with the +virtues of a cold showerbath, would calm this unwonted effervescence +of his constituency. He stepped forward upon the steps, his left +hand resting in the opening of his vest, gesturing with his right in +the proud and impassible attitude which the sculptor lends to great +orators. It was thus that he posed before his council when, finding +unexpected opposition, he undertook to impose his will upon them, +and recall the recalcitrant members to their duty. + +His speech, in fragments, penetrated to the dining-room. According +as he turned to the right or to the left, his voice was clear and +distinct, or was lost in space. He said: + +"Fellow-citizens, an atrocious crime, unheard of before in our +commune, has shocked our peaceable and honest neighborhood. I +understand and excuse your feverish emotion, your natural +indignation. As well as you, my friends, more than you--I cherished +and esteemed the noble Count de Tremorel, and his virtuous wife. We +mourn them together--" + +"I assure you," said Dr. Gendron to M. Plantat, "that the symptoms +you describe are not uncommon after pleurisy. From the acute state, +the inflammation passes to the chronic state, and becomes complicated +with pneumonia." + +"But nothing," pursued the mayor, "can justify a curiosity, which +by its importunate attempts to be satisfied, embarrasses the +investigation, and is, at all events, a punishable interference +with the cause of justice. Why this unwonted gathering? Why these +rumors and noises? These premature conjectures?" + +"There were several consultations," said M. Plantat, "which did not +have favorable results. Sauvresy suffered altogether strange and +unaccountable tortures. He complained of troubles so unwonted, so +absurd, if you'll excuse the word, that he discouraged all the +conjectures of the most experienced physicians." + +"Was it not R---, of Paris, who attended him?" + +"Exactly. He came daily, and often remained overnight. Many times +I have seen him ascending the principal street of the village, with +troubled countenance, as he went to give his prescription to the +apothecary. + +"Be wise enough," cried M. Courtois, "to moderate your just anger; +be calm; be dignified." + +"Surely," continued Dr. Gendron, "your apothecary is an intelligent +man; but you have at Orcival a fellow who quite outdoes him, a +fellow who knows how to make money; one Robelot--" + +"Robelot, the bone-setter?" + +"That's the man. I suspect him of giving consultations, and +prescribing sub rosa. He is very clever. In fact I educated him. +Five or six years ago, he was my laboratory boy, and even now I +employ him when I have a delicate operation on hand--" + +The doctor stopped, struck by the alteration in the impassible +Plantat's features. + +"What is the matter, my friend?" he asked. "Are you ill?" + +The judge left his notes, to look at him. "Why," said he, "Monsieur +Plantat is very pale--" + +But M. Plantat speedily resumed his habitual expression. + +"'Tis nothing," he answered, "really nothing. With my abominable +stomach, as soon as I change my hour of eating--" + +Having reached his peroration, M. Courtois raised his voice. + +"Return," said he, "to your peaceable homes, your quiet avocations. +Rest assured the law protects you. Already justice has begun its +work; two of the criminals are in its power, and we are on the track +of their accomplices." + +"Of all the servants of the chateau," remarked M. Plantat, "there +remains not one who knew Sauvresy. The domestics have one by one +been replaced." + +"No doubt," answered the doctor, "the sight of the old servants +would be disagreeable to Monsieur de Tremorel." + +He was interrupted by the mayor, who re-entered, his eyes glowing, +his face animated, wiping his forehead. + +"I have let the people know," said he, "the indecency of their +curiosity. They have all gone away. They were anxious to get at +Philippe Bertaud, the brigadier says; public opinion has a sharp +scent." + +Hearing the door open, he turned, and found himself face to face +with a man whose features were scarcely visible, so profoundly did +he bow, his hat pressed against his breast. + +"What do you wish?" sternly asked M. Courtois. "By what right have +you come in here?--Who are you?" + +The man drew himself up. + +"I am Monsieur Lecoq," he replied, with a gracious smile. "Monsieur +Lecoq of the detective force, sent by the prefect of police in reply +to a telegram, for this affair." + +This declaration clearly surprised all present, even the judge of +instruction. + +In France, each profession has its special externals, as it were, +insignia, which betray it at first view. Each profession has its +conventional type, and when public opinion has adopted a type, it +does not admit it possible that the type should be departed from. +What is a doctor? A grave man, all in black, with a white cravat. +A gentleman with a capacious stomach, adorned with heavy gold seals, +can only be a banker. Everybody knows that the artist is a merry +liver, with a peaked hat, a velvet vest, and enormous ruffles. By +virtue of this rule, the detective of the prefecture ought to have +an eye full of mystery, something suspicious about him, a negligence +of dress, and imitation jewelry. The most obtuse shopkeeper is sure +that he can scent a detective at twenty paces a big man with +mustaches, and a shining felt hat, his throat imprisoned by a collar +of hair, dressed in a black, threadbare surtout, carefully buttoned +up on account of the entire absence of linen. Such is the type. +But, according to this, M. Lecoq, as he entered the dining-room at +Valfeuillu, had by no means the air of a detective. True, M. Lecoq +can assume whatever air he pleases. His friends declare that he +has a physiognomy peculiar to himself, which he resumes when he +enters his own house, and which he retains by his own fireside, with +his slippers on; but the fact is not well proved. What is certain, +is that his mobile face lends itself to strange metamorphoses; that +he moulds his features according to his will, as the sculptor moulds +clay for modelling. He changes everything, even his look. + +"So," said the judge of instruction, "the prefect has sent you to me, +in case certain investigations become necessary." + +"Yes, Monsieur, quite at your service." + +M. Lecoq had on this day assumed a handsome wig of lank hair, of +that vague color called Paris blonde, parted on the side by a line +pretentiously fanciful; whiskers of the same color puffed out with +bad pomade, encircled a pallid face. His big eyes seemed congealed +within their red border, an open smile rested on his thick lips, +which, in parting, discovered a range of long yellow teeth. His +face, otherwise, expressed nothing in particular. It was a nearly +equal mixture of timidity, self-sufficiency, and contentment. It +was quite impossible to concede the least intelligence to the +possessor of such a phiz. One involuntarily looked for a goitre. +The retail haberdashers, who, having cheated for thirty years in +their threads and needles, retire with large incomes, should have +such heads as this. His apparel was as dull as his person. His +coat resembled all coats, his trousers all trousers. A hair chain, +the same color as his whiskers, was attached to a large silver watch, +which bulged out his left waistcoat pocket. While speaking, he +fumbled with a confection-box made of transparent horn, full of +little square lozenges, and adorned by a portrait of a very homely, +well-dressed woman--"the defunct," no doubt. As the conversation +proceeded, according as he was satisfied or disturbed, M. Lecoq +munched a lozenge, or directed glances toward the portrait which +were quite a poem in themselves. + +Having examined the man a long time, the judge of instruction +shrugged his shoulders. "Well," said M. Domini, finally, "now +that you are here, we will explain to you what has occurred." + +"Oh, that's quite useless," responded Lecoq, with a satisfied air, +"perfectly useless, sir." + +"Nevertheless, it is necessary that you should know--" + +"What? that which monsieur the judge knows?" interrupted the +detective, "for that I already know. Let us agree there has been +a murder, with theft as its motive; and start from that point. The +countess's body has been found--not so that of the count. What +else? Bertaud, an acknowledged rogue, is arrested; he merits a +little punishment, doubtless. Guespin came back drunk; ah, there +are sad charges against this Guespin! His past is deplorable; it +is not known where he passed the night, he refuses to answer, he +brings no alibi--this is indeed grave!" + +M. Plantat gazed at the detective with visible pleasure. + +"Who has told you about these things?" asked M. Domini. + +"Well--everybody has told me a little." + +"But where?" + +"Here: I've already been here two hours, and even heard the mayor's +speech." + +And, satisfied with the effect he had produced, M. Lecoq munched a +lozenge. + +"You were not aware, then," resumed the judge, "that I was waiting +for you?" + +"Pardon me," said the detective; "I hope you will be kind enough to +hear me. You see, it is indispensable to study the ground; one must +look about, establish his batteries. I am anxious to catch the +general rumor--public opinion, as they say, so as to distrust it." + +"All this," answered M. Domini, severely, "does not justify your +delay." + +M. Lecoq glanced tenderly at the portrait. + +"Monsieur the judge," said he, "has only to inquire at the +prefecture, and he will learn that I know my profession. The great +thing requisite, in order to make an effective search, is to remain +unknown. The police are not popular. Now, if they knew who I was, +and why I was here, I might go out, but nobody would tell me +anything; I might ask questions--they'd serve me a hundred lies; +they would distrust me, and hold their tongues." + +"Quite true--quite true," murmured Plantat, coming to the support +of the detective. + +M. Lecoq went on: + +"So that when I was told that I was going into the country, I put +on my country face and clothes. I arrive here and everybody, on +seeing me, says to himself, 'Here's a curious bumpkin, but not a +bad fellow.' Then I slip about, listen, talk, make the rest talk! +I ask this question and that, and am answered frankly; I inform +myself, gather hints, no one troubles himself about me. These +Orcival folks are positively charming; why, I've already made several +friends, and am invited to dine this very evening." + +M. Domini did not like the police, and scarcely concealed it. He +rather submitted to their co-operation than accepted it, solely +because he could not do without them. While listening to M. Lecoq, +he could not but approve of what he said; yet he looked at him with +an eye by no means friendly. + +"Since you know so much about the matter," observed he, dryly, "we +will proceed to examine the scene of the crime." + +"I am quite at Monsieur the judge's orders," returned the detective, +laconically. As everyone was getting up, he took the opportunity +to offer M. Plantat his lozenge-box. + +"Monsieur perhaps uses them?" + +Plantat, unwilling to decline, appropriated a lozenge, and the +detective's face became again serene. Public sympathy was necessary +to him, as it is to all great comedians. + + + + + VI + +M. Lecoq was the first to reach the staircase, and the spots of +blood at once caught his eye. + +"Oh," cried he, at each spot he saw, "oh, oh, the wretches!" + +M. Courtois was much moved to find, so much sensibility in a +detective. The latter, as he continued to ascend, went on: + +"The wretches! They don't often leave traces like this everywhere-- +or at least they wipe them out." + +On gaining the first landing, and the door of the boudoir which led +into the chamber, he stopped, eagerly scanning, before he entered, +the position of the rooms. + +Then he entered the boudoir, saying: + +"Come; I don't see my way clear yet." + +"But it seems to me," remarked the judge, "that we have already +important materials to aid your task. It is clear that Guespin, +if he is not an accomplice, at least knew something about the crime." + +M. Lecoq had recourse to the portrait in the lozenge-box. It was +more than a glance, it was a confidence. He evidently said something +to the dear defunct, which he dared not say aloud. + +"I see that Guespin is seriously compromised," resumed he. "Why +didn't he want to tell where he passed the night? But, then, public +opinion is against him, and I naturally distrust that." + +The detective stood alone in the middle of the room, the rest, at +his request, remained at the threshold, and looking keenly about +him, searched for some explanation of the frightful disorder of the +apartment. + +"Fools!" cried he, in an irritated tone, "double brutes! Because +they murder people so as to rob them, is no reason why they should +break everything in the house. Sharp folks don't smash up furniture; +they carry pretty picklocks, which work well and make no noise. +Idiots! one would say--" + +He stopped with his mouth wide open. + +"Eh! Not so bungling, after all, perhaps." + +The witnesses of this scene remained motionless at the door, +following, with an interest mingled with surprise, the detective's +movements. + +Kneeling down, he passed his flat palm over the thick carpet, among +the broken porcelain. + +"It's damp; very damp. The tea was not all drunk, it seems, when +the cups were broken." + +"Some tea might have remained in the teapot," suggested Plantat. + +"I know it," answered M. Lecoq, "just what I was going to say. So +that this dampness cannot tell us the exact moment when the crime +was committed." + +"But the clock does, and very exactly," interrupted the mayor. + +"The mayor," said M. Domini, "in his notes, well explains that the +movements of the clock stopped when it fell." + +"But see here," said M. Plantat, "it was the odd hour marked by +that clock that struck me. The hands point to twenty minutes past +three; yet we know that the countess was fully dressed, when she +was struck. Was she up taking tea at three in the morning? It's +hardly probable." + +"I, too, was struck with that circumstance," returned M. Lecoq, "and +that's why I said, 'not so stupid!' Well, let's see." + +He lifted the clock with great care, and replaced it on the mantel, +being cautious to set it exactly upright. The hands continued to +point to twenty minutes past three. + +"Twenty past three!" muttered he, while slipping a little wedge +under the stand. "People don't take tea at that hour. Still less +common is it that people are murdered at daylight." + +He opened the clock-case with some difficulty, and pushed the longer +hand to the figure of half-past three. + +The clock struck eleven! + +"Good," cried M. Lecoq, triumphantly. "That is the truth!" and +drawing the lozenge-box from his pocket, he excitedly crushed a +lozenge between his teeth. + +The simplicity of this discovery surprised the spectators; the idea +of trying the clock in this way had occurred to no one. M. Courtois, +especially, was bewildered. + +"There's a fellow," whispered he to the doctor, "who knows what +he's about." + +"Ergo," resumed M. Lecoq (who knew Latin), "we have here, not brutes, +as I thought at first, but rascals who looked beyond the end of their +knife. They intended to put us off the scent, by deceiving us as to +the hour." + +"I don't see their object very clearly," said M. Courtois, timidly. + +"Yet it is easy to see it," answered M. Domini. "Was it not for +their interest to make it appear that the crime was committed after +the last train for Paris had left? Guespin, leaving his companions +at the Lyons station at nine, might have reached here at ten, +murdered the count and countess, seized the money which he knew to +be in the count's possession, and returned to Paris by the last +train." + +"These conjectures are very shrewd," interposed M. Plantat; "but +how is it that Guespin did not rejoin his comrades in the +Batignolles? For in that way, to a certain degree, he might have +provided a kind of alibi." + +Dr. Gendron had been sitting on the only unbroken chair in the +chamber, reflecting on Plantat's sudden embarrassment, when he +had spoken of Robelot the bone-setter. The remarks of the judge +drew him from his revery; he got up, and said: + +"There is another point; putting forward the time was perhaps +useful to Guespin, but it would greatly damage Bertaud, his +accomplice." + +"But," answered M. Domini, "it might be that Bertaud was not +consulted. As to Guespin, he had no doubt good reasons for not +returning to the wedding. His restlessness, after such a deed, +would possibly have betrayed him." + +M. Lecoq had not thought fit to speak as yet. Like a doctor at a +sick bedside, he wanted to be sure of his diagnosis. He had +returned to the mantel, and again pushed forward the hands of the +clock. It sounded, successively, half-past eleven, then twelve, +then half-past twelve, then one. + +As he moved the hands, he kept muttering: + +"Apprentices--chance brigands! You are malicious, parbleu, but +you don't think of everything. You give a push to the hands, but +don't remember to put the striking in harmony with them. Then +comes along a detective, an old rat who knows things, and the dodge +is discovered." + +M. Domini and Plantat held their tongues. M. Lecoq walked up to +them. + +"Monsieur the Judge," said he, "is perhaps now convinced that the +deed was done at half-past ten." + +"Unless," interrupted M. Plantat, "the machinery of the clock has +been out of order." + +"That often happens," added M. Courtois. "The clock in my +drawing-room is in such a state that I never know the time of day." + +M. Lecoq reflected. + +"It is possible," said he, "that Monsieur Plantat is right. The +probability is in favor of my theory; but probability, in such an +affair, is not sufficient; we must have certainty. There happily +remains a mode of testing the matter--the bed; I'll wager it is +rumpled up." Then addressing the mayor, "I shall need a servant to +lend me a hand." + +"I'll help you," said Plantat, "that will be a quicker way." + +They lifted the top of the bed and set it on the floor, at the +same time raising the curtains. + +"Hum!" cried M. Lecoq, "was I right?" + +"True," said M. Domini, surprised, "the bed is rumpled." + +"Yes; and yet no one has lain in it." + +"But--" objected M. Courtois. + +"I am sure of what I say," interrupted the detective. "The sheets, +it is true, have been thrown back, perhaps someone has rolled about +in the bed; the pillows have been tumbled, the quilts and curtains +ruffled, but this bed has not the appearance of having been slept +in. It is, perhaps, more difficult to rumple up a bed than to put +it in order again. To make it up, the coverings must be taken off, +and the mattresses turned. To disarrange it, one must actually lie +down in it, and warm it with the body. A bed is one of those +terrible witnesses which never misguide, and against which no counter +testimony can be given. Nobody has gone to bed in this--" + +"The countess," remarked Plantat, "was dressed; but the count might +have gone to bed first." + +"No," answered M. Lecoq, "I'll prove to the contrary. The proof is +easy, indeed, and a child of ten, having heard it, wouldn't think +of being deceived by this intentional disorder of the bedclothes." + +M. Lecoq's auditors drew up to him. He put the coverings back upon +the middle of the bed, and went on: + +"Both of the pillows are much rumpled, are they not? But look under +the bolster--it is all smooth, and you find none of those wrinkles +which are made by the weight of the head and the moving about of +the arms. That's not all; look at the bed from the middle to the +foot. The sheets being laid carefully, the upper and under lie +close together everywhere. Slip your hand underneath--there--you +see there is a resistance to your hand which would not occur if the +legs had been stretched in that place. Now Monsieur de Tremorel +was tall enough to extend the full length of the bed." + +This demonstration was so clear, its proof so palpable, that it +could not be gainsaid. + +"This is nothing," continued M. Lecoq. "Let us examine the second +mattress. When a person purposely disarranges a bed, he does not +think of the second mattress." + +He lifted up the upper mattress, and observed that the covering of +the under one was perfectly even. + +"H'm, the second mattress," muttered M. Lecoq, as if some memory +crossed his mind. + +"It appears to be proved," observed the judge, "that Monsieur de +Tremorel had not gone to bed." + +"Besides," added the doctor, "if he had been murdered in his bed, +his clothes would be lying here somewhere." + +"Without considering," suggested M. Lecoq, "that some blood must +have been found on the sheets. Decidedly, these criminals were +not shrewd." + +"What seems to me surprising," M. Plantat observed to the judge, +"is that anybody would succeed in killing, except in his sleep, a +young man so vigorous as Count Hector." + +"And in a house full of weapons," added Dr. Gendron; "for the +count's cabinet is full of guns, swords and hunting knives; it's +a perfect arsenal." + +"Alas!" sighed M. Courtois, "we know of worse catastrophes. There +is not a week that the papers don't--" + +He stopped, chagrined, for nobody was listening to him. Plantat +claimed the general attention, and continued: + +"The confusion in the house seems to you surprising; well now, I'm +surprised that it is not worse than it is. I am, so to speak, an +old man; I haven't the energy of a young man of thirty-five; yet it +seems to me that if assassins should get into my house, when I was +there, and up, it would go hard with them. I don't know what I +would do; probably I should be killed; but surely I would give the +alarm. I would defend myself, and cry out, and open the windows, +and set the house afire." + +"Let us add," insisted the doctor, "that it is not easy to surprise +a man who is awake. There is always an unexpected noise which puts +one on his guard. Perhaps it is a creaking door, or a cracking +stair. However cautious the murderer, he does not surprise his +victim." + +"They may have used fire-arms;" struck in the worthy mayor, "that +has been done. You are quietly sitting in your chamber; it is +summer, and your windows are open; you are chatting with your wife, +and sipping a cup of tea; outside, the assassins are supplied with +a short ladder; one ascends to a level with the window, sights you +at his ease, presses the trigger, the bullet speeds--" + +"And," continued the doctor, "the whole neighborhood, aroused by it, +hastens to the spot." + +"Permit me, pardon, permit me," said M. Courtois, testily, "that +would be so in a populous town. Here, in the midst of a vast park, +no. Think, doctor, of the isolation of this house. The nearest +neighbor is a long way off, and between there are many large trees, +intercepting the sound. Let us test it by experience. I will fire +a pistol in this room, and I'll wager that you will not hear the +echo in the road." + +"In the daytime, perhaps, but not in the night." + +"Well," said M. Domini, who had been reflecting while M. Courtois +was talking, "if against all hope, Guespin does not decide to speak +to-night, or to-morrow, the count's body will afford us a key to +the mystery." + +During this discussion, M. Lecoq had continued his investigations, +lifting the furniture, studying the fractures, examining the +smallest pieces, as if they might betray the truth. Now and then, +he took out an instrument-case, from which he produced a shank, +which he introduced and turned in the locks. He found several keys +on the carpet, and on a rack, a towel, which he carefully put one +side, as if he deemed it important. He came and went from the +bedroom to the count's cabinet, without losing a word that was said; +noting in his memory, not so much the phrases uttered, as the +diverse accents and intonations with which they were spoken. In an +inquest such as that of the crime of Orcival, when several officials +find themselves face to face, they hold a certain reserve toward +each other. They know each other to have nearly equal experience, +to be shrewd, clear-headed, equally interested in discovering the +truth, not disposed to confide in appearances, difficult to +surprise. Each one, likely enough, gives a different interpretation +to the facts revealed; each may have a different theory of the deed; +but a superficial observer would not note these differences. Each, +while dissimulating his real thoughts, tries to penetrate those of +his neighbor, and if they are opposed to his own, to convert him +to his opinion. The great importance of a single word justifies +this caution. Men who hold the liberty and lives of others in their +hands, a scratch of whose pen condemns to death, are apt to feel +heavily the burden of their responsibility. It is an ineffable +solace, to feel that this burden is shared by others. This is, why +no one dares take the initiative, or express himself openly; but +each awaits other opinions, to adopt or oppose them. They exchange +fewer affirmations than suggestions. They proceed by insinuation; +then they utter commonplaces, ridiculous suppositions, asides, +provocative, as it were, of other explanations. + +In this instance, the judge of instruction and Plantat were far +from being of the same opinion; they knew it before speaking a word. +But M. Domini, whose opinion rested on material and palpable facts, +which appeared to him indisputable, was not disposed to provoke +contradiction. Plantat, on the contrary, whose system seemed to +rest on impressions, on a series of logical deductions, would not +clearly express himself, without a positive and pressing invitation. +His last speech, impressively uttered, had not been replied to; he +judged that he had advanced far enough to sound the detective. + +"Well, Monsieur Lecoq," asked he, "have you found any new traces?" + +M. Lecoq was at that moment curiously examining a large portrait +of the Count Hector, which hung opposite the bed. Hearing M. +Plantat's question, he turned. + +"I have found nothing decisive," answered he, "and I have found +nothing to refute my conjectures. But--" + +He did not finish; perhaps he too, recoiled before his share of the +responsibility. + +"What?" insisted M. Domini, sternly. + +"I was going to say," resumed M. Lecoq, "that I am not yet satisfied. +I have my lantern and a candle in it; I only need a match--" + +"Please preserve your decorum," interrupted the judge severely. + +"Very well, then," continued M. Lecoq, in a tone too humble to be +serious, "I still hesitate. If the doctor, now, would kindly +proceed to examine the countess's body, he would do me a great +service." + +"I was just going to ask the same favor, Doctor," said M. Domini. + +The doctor answering, "Willingly," directed his steps toward the +door. + +M. Lecoq caught him by the arm. + +"If you please," said he, in a tone totally unlike that he had used +up to this time, "I would like to call your attention to the wounds +on the head, made by a blunt instrument, which I suppose to be a +hammer. I have studied these wounds, and though I am no doctor, +they seem to me suspicious." + +"And to me," M. Plantat quickly added. "It seemed to me, that in +the places struck, there was no emission of blood in the cutaneous +vessels." + +"The nature of these wounds," continued M. Lecoq, "will be a +valuable indication, which will fix my opinion." And, as he felt +keenly the brusque manner of the judge, he added: + +"It is you, Doctor, who hold the match." + +M. Gendron was about to leave the room, when Baptiste, the mayor's +servant--the man who wouldn't be scolded--appeared. He bowed and +said: + +"I have come for Monsieur the Mayor." + +"For me? why?" asked M. Courtois. "What's the matter? They don't +give me a minute's rest! Answer that I am busy." + +"It's on account of madame," resumed the placid Baptiste; "she isn't +at all well." The excellent mayor grew slightly pale. + +"My wife!" cried he, alarmed. "What do you mean? Explain yourself." + +"The postman arrived just now," returned Baptiste with a most +tranquil air, "and I carried the letters to madame, who was in the +drawing-room. Hardly had I turned on my heels when I heard a shriek, +and the noise of someone falling to the floor." Baptiste spoke +slowly, taking artful pains to prolong his master's anguish. + +"Speak! go on!" cried the mayor, exasperated. "Speak, won't you?" + +"I naturally opened the drawing-room door again. What did I see? + madame, at full length on the floor. I called for help; the +chambermaid, cook, and others came hastening up, and we carried +madame to her bed. Justine said that it was a letter from +Mademoiselle Laurence which overcame my mistress--" + +At each word Baptiste hesitated, reflected; his eyes, giving the +lie to his solemn face, betrayed the great satisfaction he felt in +relating his master's misfortunes. + +His master was full of consternation. As it is with all of us, +when we know not exactly what ill is about to befall us, he dared +not ask any questions. He stood still, crushed; lamenting, instead +of hastening home. M. Plantat profited by the pause to question +the servant, with a look which Baptiste dared not disobey. + +"What, a letter from Mademoiselle Laurence? Isn't she here, then?" + +"No, sir: she went away a week ago, to pass a month with one of her +aunts." + +"And how is madame?" + +"Better, sir; only she cries piteously." + +The unfortunate mayor had now somewhat recovered his presence of +mind. He seized Baptiste by the arm. + +"Come along," cried he, "come along!" + +They hastened off. + +"Poor man!" said the judge of instruction. "Perhaps his daughter +is dead." + +M. Plantat shook his head. + +"If it were only that!" muttered he. He added, turning to M. +Domini: + +"Do you recall the allusions of Bertaud, monsieur?" + + + + +VII + +The judge of instruction, the doctor, and M. Plantat exchanged a +significant look. What misfortune had befallen M. Courtois, this +worthy, and despite his faults, excellent person? Decidedly, this +was an ill-omened day! + +"If we are to speak of Bertaud's allusions," said M. Lecoq, "I have +heard two very curious stories, though I have been here but a few +hours. It seems that this Mademoiselle Laurence--" + +M. Plantat abruptly interrupted the detective. + +"Calumnies! odious calumnies! The lower classes, to annoy the rich, +do not hesitate to say all sorts of things against them. Don't you +know it? Is it not always so? The gentry, above all, those of a +provincial town, live in glass houses. The lynx eyes of envy watch +them steadily night and day, spy on them, surprise what they regard +as their most secret actions to arm themselves against them. The +bourgeois goes on, proud and content; his business prospers; he +possesses the esteem and friendship of his own class; all this +while, he is vilified by the lower classes, his name dragged in the +dust, soiled by, suppositions the most mischievous. Envy, Monsieur, +respects nothing, no one." + +"If Laurence has been slandered," observed Dr. Gendron, smiling, +"she has a good advocate to defend her." + +The old justice of the peace (the man of bronze, as M. Courtois +called him) blushed slightly, a little embarrassed. + +"There are causes," said he, quietly, "which defend themselves. +Mademoiselle Courtois is one of those young girls who has a right +to all respect. But there are evils which no laws can cure, and +which revolt me. Think of it, monsieurs, our reputations, the +honor of our wives and daughters, are at the mercy of the first +petty rascal who has imagination enough to invent a slander. It +is not believed, perhaps; but it is repeated, and spreads. What +can be done? How can we know what is secretly said against us; +will we ever know it?" + +"Eh!" replied the doctor, "what matters it? There is only one +voice, to my mind, worth listening to--that of conscience. As to +what is called 'public opinion,' as it is the aggregate opinion of +thousands of fools and rogues, I only despise it." + +This discussion might have been prolonged, if the judge of +instruction had not pulled out his watch, and made an impatient +gesture. + +"While we are talking, time is flying," said he. "We must hasten +to the work that still remains." + +It was then agreed that while the doctor proceeded to his autopsy, +the judge should draw up his report of the case. M. Plantat was +charged with watching Lecoq's investigations. + +As soon as the detective found himself alone with M. Plantat: + +"Well," he said, drawing a long breath, as if relieved of a heavy +burden, "now we can get on." + +Plantat smiled; the detective munched a lozenge, and added: + +"It was very annoying to find the investigation already going on +when I reached here. Those who were here before me have had time +to get up a theory, and if I don't adopt it at once, there is the +deuce to pay!" + +M. Domini's voice was heard in the entry, calling out to his clerk. + +"Now there's the judge of instruction," continued Lecoq, "who thinks +this a very simple affair; while I, Lecoq, the equal at least of +Gevrol, the favorite pupil of Papa Tabaret--I do not see it at all +clearly yet." + +He stopped; and after apparently going over in his mind the result +of his discoveries, went on: "No; I'm off the track, and have +almost lost my way. I see something underneath all this--but +what? what?" + +M. Plantat's face remained placid, but his eyes shone. + +"Perhaps you are right," said he, carelessly; "perhaps there is +something underneath." The detective looked at him; he didn't +stir. His face seemed the most undisturbed in the world. There +was a long silence, by which M. Lecoq profited to confide to the +portrait of the defunct the reflections which burdened his brain. + +"See here, my dear darling," said he, "this worthy person seems a +shrewd old customer, and I must watch his actions and gestures +carefully. He does not argue with the judge; he's got an idea that +he doesn't dare to tell, and we must find it out. At the very first +he guessed me out, despite these pretty blond locks. As long as he +thought he could, by misleading me, make me follow M. Domini's tack, +he followed and aided me showing me the way. Now that he sees me +on the scent, he crosses his arms and retires. He wants to leave +me the honor of the discovery. Why? He lives here--perhaps he +is afraid of making enemies. No. He isn't a man to fear much of +anything. What then? He shrinks from his own thoughts. He has +found something so amazing, that he dares not explain himself." + +A sudden reflection changed the course of M. Lecoq's confidences. + +"A thousand imps!" thought he. "Suppose I'm wrong! Suppose this +old fellow is not shrewd at all! Suppose he hasn't discovered +anything, and only obeys the inspirations of chance! I've seen +stranger things. I've known so many of these folks whose eyes +seem so very mysterious, and announce such wonders; after all, I +found nothing, and was cheated. But I intend to sound this old +fellow well." + +And, assuming his most idiotic manner, he said aloud: + +"On reflection, Monsieur, little remains to be done. Two of the +principals are in custody, and when they make up their minds to +talk--they'll do it, sooner or later, if the judge is determined +they shall--we shall know all." + +A bucket of ice-water falling on M. Plantat's head could not have +surprised him more, or more disagreeably, than this speech. + +"What!" stammered he, with an air of frank amazement, "do you, a +man of experience, who--" + +Delighted with the success of his ruse, Lecoq could not keep his +countenance, and Plantat, who perceived that he had been caught in +the snare, laughed heartily. Not a word, however, was exchanged +between these two men, both subtle in the science of life, and +equally cunning in its mysteries. They quite understood each other. + +"My worthy old buck," said the detective to himself, "you've got +something in your sack; only it's so big, so monstrous, that you +won't exhibit it, not for a cannon-ball. You wish your hand forced, +do you? Ve-ry well!" + +"He's sly," thought M. Plantat. "He knows that I've got an idea; +he's trying to get at it--and I believe he will." + +M. Lecoq had restored his lozenge-box to his pocket, as he always +did when he went seriously to work. His amour-propre was enlisted; +he played a part--and he was a rare comedian. + +"Now," cried he, "let's to horse. According to the mayor's account, +the instrument with which all these things were broken has been +found." + +"In the room in the second story," answered M. Plantat, "overlooking +the garden, we found a hatchet on the floor, near a piece of +furniture which had been assailed, but not broken open; I forbade +anyone to touch it." + +"And you did well. Is it a heavy hatchet?" + +"It weighs about two pounds." + +"Good. Let's see it." + +They ascended to the room in question, and M. Lecoq, forgetting his +part of a haberdasher, and regardless of his clothes, went down flat +on his stomach, alternately scrutinizing the hatchet--which was a +heavy, terrible weapon--and the slippery and well-waxed oaken floor. + +"I suppose," observed M. Plantat, "that the assassins brought this +hatchet up here and assailed this cupboard, for the sole purpose of +putting us off our scent, and to complicate the mystery. This +weapon, you see, was by no means necessary for breaking open the +cupboard, which I could smash with my fist. They gave one blow-- +only one--and quietly put the hatchet down." + +The detective got up and brushed himself. + +"I think you are mistaken," said he. "This hatchet wasn't put on +the floor gently; it was thrown with a violence betraying either +great terror or great anger. Look here; do you see these three +marks, near each other, on the floor? When the assassin threw the +hatchet, it first fell on the edge--hence this sharp cut; then it +fell over on one side; and the flat, or hammer end left this mark +here, under my finger. Therefore, it was thrown with such violence +that it turned over itself and that its edge a second time cut in +the floor, where you see it now." + +"True," answered M. Plantat. The detective's conjectures doubtless +refuted his own theory, for he added, with a perplexed air: + +"I don't understand anything about it." + +M. Lecoq went on: + +"Were the windows open this morning as they are now?" + +"Yes." + +"Ah! The wretches heard some noise or other in the garden, and +they went and looked out. What did they see? I can't tell. But +I do know that what they saw terrified them, that they threw down +the hatchet furiously, and made off. Look at the position of these +cuts--they are slanting of course--and you will see that the +hatchet was thrown by a man who was standing, not by the cupboard, +but close by the open window." + +Plantat in his turn knelt down, and looked long and carefully. +The detective was right. He got up confused, and after meditating +a moment, said: + +"This perplexes me a little; however--" + +He stopped, motionless, in a revery, with one of his hands on his +forehead. + +"All might yet be explained," he muttered, mentally searching for a +solution of the mystery, "and in that case the time indicated by +the clock would be true." + +M. Lecoq did not think of questioning his companion. He knew that +he would not answer, for pride's sake. + +"This matter of the hatchet puzzles me, too," said he. "I thought +that these assassins had worked leisurely; but that can't be so. +I see they were surprised and interrupted." + +Plantat was all ears. + +"True," pursued M. Lecoq, slowly, "we ought to divide these +indications into two classes. There are the traces left on purpose +to mislead us--the jumbled-up bed, for instance; then there are +the real traces, undesigned, as are these hatchet cuts. But here +I hesitate. Is the trace of the hatchet true or false, good or +bad? I thought myself sure of the character of these assassins: +but now--" He paused; the wrinkles on his face, the contraction +of his mouth, betrayed his mental effort. + +"But now?" asked M. Plantat. + +M. Lecoq, at this question, seemed like a man just roused from sleep. + +"I beg your pardon," said he. "I forgot myself. I've a bad habit +of reflecting aloud. That's why I almost always insist on working +alone. My uncertainty, hesitation, the vacillation of my suspicions, +lose me the credit of being an astute detective--of being an agent +for whom there's no such thing as a mystery." + +Worthy M. Plantat gave the detective an indulgent smile. + +"I don't usually open my mouth," pursued M. Lecoq, "until my mind +is satisfied; then I speak in a peremptory tone, and say--this is +thus, or this is so. But to-day I am acting without too much +restraint, in the company of a man who knows that a problem such +as this seems to me to be, is not solved at the first attempt. So +I permit my gropings to be seen without shame. You cannot always +reach the truth at a bound, but by a series of diverse calculations, +by deductions and inductions. Well, just now my logic is at fault." + +"How so?" + +"Oh, it's very simple. I thought I understood the rascals, and +knew them by heart; and yet I have only recognized imaginary +adversaries. Are they fools, or are they mighty sly? That's what +I ask myself. The tricks played with the bed and clock had, I +supposed, given me the measure and extent of their intelligence +and invention. Making deductions from the known to the unknown, +I arrived, by a series of very simple consequences, at the point +of foreseeing all that they could have imagined, to throw us off +the scent. My point of departure admitted, I had only, in order +to reach the truth, to take the contrary of that which appearances +indicated. I said to myself: + +"A hatchet has been found in the second story; therefore the +assassins carried it there, and designedly forgot it. + +"They left five glasses on the dining-room table; therefore they +were more or less than five, but they were not five. + +"There were the remains of a supper on the table; therefore they +neither drank nor ate. + +"The countess's body was on the river-bank; therefore it was placed +there deliberately. A piece of cloth was found in the victim's hand; +therefore it was put there by the murderers themselves. + +"Madame de Tremorel's body is disfigured by many dagger-strokes, and +horribly mutilated; therefore she was killed by a single blow--" + +"Bravo, yes, bravo," cried M. Plantat, visibly charmed. + +"Eh! no, not bravo yet," returned M. Lecoq. "For here my thread +is broken; I have reached a gap. If my deductions were sound, this +hatchet would have been very carefully placed on the floor." + +"Once more, bravo," added the other, "for this does not at all +affect our general theory. It is clear, nay certain, that the +assassins intended to act as you say. An unlooked-for event +interrupted them." + +"Perhaps; perhaps that's true. But I see something else--" + +"What?" + +"Nothing--at least, for the moment. Before all, I must see the +dining-room and the garden." + +They descended at once, and Plantat pointed out the glasses and +bottles, which he had put one side. The detective took the glasses, +one after another, held them level with his eye, toward the light, +and scrutinized the moist places left on them. + +"No one has drank from these glasses," said he, firmly. + +"What, from neither one of them?" + +The detective fixed a penetrating look upon his companion, and in +a measured tone, said: + +"From neither one." + +M. Plantat only answered by a movement of the lips, as if to say, +"You are going too far." + +The other smiled, opened the door, and called: + +"Francois!" + +The valet hastened to obey the call. His face was suffused with +tears; he actually bewailed the loss of his master. + +"Hear what I've got to say, my lad," said M. Lecoq, with true +detective-like familiarity. "And be sure and answer me exactly, +frankly, and briefly." + +"I will, sir." + +"Was it customary here at the chateau, to bring up the wine before +it was wanted?" + +"No, sir; before each meal, I myself went down to the cellar for it." + +"Then no full bottles were ever kept in the dining-room?" + +"Never." + +"But some of the wine might sometimes remain in draught?" + +"No; the count permitted me to carry the dessert wine to the +servants' table." + +"And where were the empty bottles put?" + +"I put them in this corner cupboard, and when they amounted to a +certain number, I carried them down cellar." + +"When did you last do so?" + +"Oh"--Francois reflected--"at least five or six days ago." + +"Good. Now, what liqueurs did the count drink?" + +"The count scarcely ever drank liqueurs. If, by chance, he took a +notion to have a small glass of eau-de-vie, he got it from the +liqueur closet, there, over the stove." + +"There were no decanters of rum or cognac in any of the cupboards?" + +"No." + +"Thanks; you may retire." + +As Francois was going out, M. Lecoq called him back. + +"While we are about it, look in the bottom of the closet, and see +if you find the right number of empty bottles." + +The valet obeyed, and looked into the closet. + +"There isn't one there." + +"Just so," returned M. Lecoq. "This time, show us your heels for +good." + +As soon as Francois had shut the door, M. Lecoq turned to Plantat +and asked: + +"What do you think now?" + +"You were perfectly right." + +The detective then smelt successively each glass and bottle. + +"Good again! Another proof in aid of my guess." + +"What more?" + +"It was not wine that was at the bottom of these glasses. Among +all the empty bottles put away in the bottom of that closet, there +was one--here it is--which contained vinegar; and it was from +this bottle that they turned what they thought to be wine into the +glasses." + +Seizing a glass, he put it to M. Plantat's nose, adding: + +"See for yourself." + +There was no disputing it; the vinegar was good, its odor of the +strongest; the villains, in their haste, had left behind them an +incontestable proof of their intention to mislead the officers of +justice. While they were capable of shrewd inventions, they did +not have the art to perform them well. All their oversights could, +however, be accounted for by their sudden haste, caused by the +occurrence of an unlooked-for incident. "The floors of a house +where a crime has just been committed," said a famous detective, +"burn the feet." M. Lecoq seemed exasperated, like a true artist, +before the gross, pretentious, and ridiculous work of some green +and bungling scholar. + +"These are a parcel of vulgar ruffians, truly! able ones, certainly; +but they don't know their trade yet, the wretches." + +M. Lecoq, indignant, ate three or four lozenges at a mouthful. + +"Come, now," said Plantat, in a paternally severe tone. "Don't +let's get angry. The people have failed in address, no doubt; but +reflect that they could not, in their calculations, take account +of the craft of a man like you." + +M. Lecoq, who had the vanity which all actors possess, was flattered +by the compliment, and but poorly dissimulated an expression of +pleasure. + +"We must be indulgent; come now," pursued Plantat. "Besides," he +paused a moment to give more weight to what he was going to say, +"besides, you haven't seen everything yet." + +No one could tell when M. Lecoq was playing a comedy. He did not +always know, himself. This great artist, devoted to his art, +practised the feigning of all the emotions of the human soul, just +as he accustomed himself to wearing all sorts of costumes. He was +very indignant against the assassins, and gesticulated about in +great excitement; but he never ceased to watch Plantat slyly, and +the last words of the latter made him prick up his ears. + +"Let's see the rest, then," said he. + +As he followed his worthy comrade to the garden, he renewed his +confidences to the dear defunct. + +"Confound this old bundle of mystery! We can't take this obstinate +fellow by surprise, that's clear. He'll give us the word of the +riddle when we have guessed it; not before. He is as strong as we, +my darling; he only needs a little practice. But look you--if he +has found something which has escaped us, he must have previous +information, that we don't know of." + +Nothing had been disturbed in the garden. + +"See here, Monsieur Lecoq," said the old justice of the peace, as he +followed a winding pathway which led to the river. "It was here that +one of the count's slippers was found; below there, a little to the +right of these geraniums, his silk handkerchief was picked up." + +They reached the river-bank, and lifted, with great care, the planks +which had been placed there to preserve the foot-prints. + +"We suppose," said M. Plantat, "that the countess, in her flight, +succeeded in getting to this spot; and that here they caught up +with her and gave her a finishing blow." + +Was this really Plantat's opinion, or did he only report the +morning's theory? M. Lecoq could not tell. + +"According to my calculations," he said, "the countess could not +have fled, but was brought here already dead, or logic is not logic. + However, let us examine this spot carefully." + +He knelt down and studied the sand on the path, the stagnant water, +and the reeds and water-plants. Then going along a little distance, +he threw a stone, approaching again to see the effect produced on +the mud. He next returned to the house, and came back again under +the willows, crossing the lawn, where were still clearly visible +traces of a heavy burden having been dragged over it. Without the +least respect for his pantaloons, he crossed the lawn on all-fours, +scrutinizing the smallest blades of grass, pulling away the thick +tufts to see the earth better, and minutely observing the direction +of the broken stems. This done, he said: + +"My conclusions are confirmed. The countess was carried across here." + +"Are you sure of it?" asked Plantat. + +There was no mistaking the old man's hesitation this time; he was +clearly undecided, and leaned on the other's judgment for guidance. + +"There can be no error, possibly." + +The detective smiled, as he added: + +"Only, as two heads are better than one, I will ask you to listen +to me, and then, you will tell me what you think." + +M. Lecoq had, in searching about, picked up a little flexible stick, +and while he talked, he used it to point out this and that object, +like the lecturer at the panorama. + +"No," said he, "Madame de Tremorel did not fly from her murderers. +Had she been struck down here, she would have fallen violently; her +weight, therefore, would have made the water spirt to some distance, +as well as the mud; and we should certainly have found some splashes." + +"But don't you think that, since morning, the sun--" + +"The sun would have absorbed the water; but the stain of dry mud +would have remained. I have found nothing of the sort anywhere. +You might object, that the water and mud would have spirted right +and left; but just look at the tufts of these flags, lilies, and +stems of cane--you find a light dust on every one. Do you find +the least trace of a drop of water? No. There was then no splash, +therefore no violent fall; therefore the countess was not killed +here; therefore her body was brought here, and carefully deposited +where you found it." + +M. Plantat did not seem to be quite convinced yet. + +"But there are the traces of a struggle in the sand," said he. + +His companion made a gesture of protest. + +"Monsieur deigns to have his joke; those marks would not deceive a +school-boy." + +"It appears to me, however--" + +"There can be no mistake, Monsieur Plantat. Certain it is that the +sand has been disturbed and thrown about. But all these trails that +lay bare the earth which was covered by the sand, were made by the +same foot. Perhaps you don't believe it. They were made, too, with +the end of the foot; that you may see for yourself." + +"Yes, I perceive it." + +"Very well, then; when there has been a struggle on ground like +this, there are always two distinct kinds of traces--those of the +assailant and those of the victim. The assailant, throwing himself +forward, necessarily supports himself on his toes, and imprints the +fore part of his feet on the earth. The victim, on the contrary, +falling back, and trying to avoid the assault, props himself on his +heels, and therefore buries the heels in the soil. If the +adversaries are equally strong, the number of imprints of the toes +and the heels will be nearly equal, according to the chances of the +struggle. But what do we find here?" + +M. Plantat interrupted: + +"Enough; the most incredulous would now be convinced." After +thinking a moment, he added: + +"No, there is no longer any possible doubt of it." + +M. Lecoq thought that his argument deserved a reward, and treated +himself to two lozenges at a mouthful. + +"I haven't done yet," he resumed. "Granted, that the countess could +not have been murdered here; let's add that she was not carried +hither, but dragged along. There are only two ways of dragging a +body; by the shoulders, and in this case the feet, scraping along +the earth, leave two parallel trails; or by the legs--in which +case the head, lying on the earth, leaves a single furrow, and that +a wide one." + +Plantat nodded assent. + +"When I examined the lawn," pursued M. Lecoq, "I found the parallel +trails of the feet, but yet the grass was crushed over a rather +wide space. How was that? Because it was the body, not of a man, +but of a woman, which was dragged across the lawn--of a woman +full-dressed, with heavy petticoats; that, in short, of the countess, +and not of the count." + +M. Lecoq paused, in expectation of a question, or a remark. + +But the old justice of the peace did not seem to be listening, and +appeared to be plunged in the deepest meditation. Night was falling; +a light fog hung like smoke over the Seine. + +"We must go in," said M. Plantat, abruptly, "and see how the doctor +has got on with his autopsy." + +They slowly approached the house. The judge of instruction awaited +them on the steps. He appeared to have a satisfied air. + +"I am going to leave you in charge," said he to M. Plantat, "for if +I am to see the procureur, I must go at once. When you sent for +him this morning, he was absent." + +M. Plantat bowed. + +"I shall be much obliged if you will watch this affair to the end. +The doctor will have finished in a few minutes, he says, and will +report to-morrow morning. I count on your co-operation to put +seals wherever they are necessary, and to select the guard over the +chateau. I shall send an architect to draw up an exact plan of the +house and garden. Well, sir," asked M. Domini, turning to the +detective, "have you made any fresh discoveries?" + +"I have found some important facts; but I cannot speak decisively +till I have seen everything by daylight. If you will permit me, I +will postpone making my report till to-morrow afternoon. I think +I may say, however, that complicated as this affair is--" + +M. Domini did not let him finish. + +"I see nothing complicated in the affair at all; everything strikes +me as very simple." + +"But," objected M. Lecoq, "I thought--" + +"I sincerely regret," continued the judge, "that you were so hastily +called, when there was really no serious reason for it. The +evidences against the arrested men are very conclusive." + +Plantat and Lecoq exchanged a long look, betraying their great +surprise. + +"What!" exclaimed the former, "have, you discovered any new +indications?" + +"More than indications, I believe," responded M. Domini. "Old +Bertaud, whom I have again questioned, begins to be uneasy. He has +quite lost his arrogant manner. I succeeded in making him +contradict himself several times, and he finished by confessing +that he saw the assassins." + +"The assassins!" exclaimed M. Plantat. "Did he say assassins?" + +"He saw at least one of them. He persists in declaring that he did +not recognize him. That's where we are. But prison walls have +salutary terrors. To-morrow after a sleepless night, the fellow +will be more explicit, if I mistake not." + +"But Guespin," anxiously asked the old man, "have you questioned +him?" + +"Oh, as for him, everything is clear." + +"Has he confessed?" asked M. Lecoq, stupefied. + +The judge half turned toward the detective, as if he were displeased +that M. Lecoq should dare to question him. + +"Guespin has not confessed," he answered, "but his case is none the +better for that. Our searchers have returned. They haven't yet +found the count's body, and I think it has been carried down by the +current. But they found at the end of the park, the count's other +slipper, among the roses; and under the bridge, in the middle of +the river, they discovered a thick vest which still bears the marks +of blood." + +"And that vest is Guespin's?" + +"Exactly so. It was recognized by all the domestics, and Guespin +himself did not hesitate to admit that it belonged to him. But that +is not all--" + +M. Domini stopped as if to take breath, but really to keep Plantat +in suspense. As they differed in their theories, he thought Plantat +betrayed a stupid opposition to him; and he was not sorry to have a +chance for a little triumph. + +"That is not all," he went on; "this vest had, in the right pocket, +a large rent, and a piece of it had been torn off. Do you know what +became of that piece of Guespin's vest?" + +"Ah," muttered M. Plantat, "it was that which we found in the +countess's hand." + +"You are right, Monsieur. And what think you of this proof, pray, +of the prisoner's guilt?" + +M. Plantat seemed amazed; his arms fell at his side. As for M. +Lecoq, who, in presence of the judge, had resumed his haberdasher +manner, he was so much surprised that he nearly strangled himself +with a lozenge. + +"A thousand devils!" exclaimed he. "That's tough, that is!" He +smiled sillily, and added in a low tone, meant only for Plantat's +ear. + +"Mighty tough! Though quite foreseen in our calculations. The +countess held a piece of cloth tightly in her hand; therefore it +was put there, intentionally, by the murderers." + +M. Domini did not hear this remark. He shook hands with M. Plantat +and made an appointment to meet him on the morrow, at the court-house. +Then he went away with his clerk. + +Guespin and old Bertaud, handcuffed, had a few minutes before being +led off to the prison of Corbeil, under the guard of the Orcival +gendarmes. + + + + +VIII + +Dr. Gendron had just finished his sad task in the billiard-room. +He had taken off his long coat, and pulled up his shirt-sleeves +above his elbows. His instruments lay on a table near him; he had +covered the body with a long white sheet. Night had come, and a +large lamp, with a crystal globe, lighted up the gloomy scene. +The doctor, leaning over a water-basin, was washing his hands, when +the old justice of the peace and the detective entered. + +"Ah, it's you, Plantat," said the doctor in a suppressed tone; +"where is Monsieur Domini?" + +"Gone." + +The doctor did not take the trouble to repress a vexed motion. + +"I must speak with him, though," said he, "it's absolutely necessary-- +and the sooner the better; for perhaps I am wrong--I may be +mistaken--" + +M. Lecoq and M. Plantat approached him, having carefully closed +the door. The doctor was paler than the corpse which lay under the +sheet. His usually calm features betrayed great distress. This +change could not have been caused by the task in which he had been +engaged. Of course it was a painful one; but M. Gendron was one +of those experienced practitioners who have felt the pulse of every +human misery, and whose disgust had become torpid by the most +hideous spectacles. He must have discovered something extraordinary. + +"I am going to ask you what you asked me a while ago," said M. +Plantat. "Are you ill or suffering?" + +M. Gendron shook his head sorrowfully, and answered, slowly and +emphatically: + +"I will answer you, as you did me; 'tis nothing, I am already +better." + +Then these two, equally profound, turned away their heads, as if +fearing to exchange their ideas; they doubted lest their looks +should betray them. + +M. Lecoq advanced and spoke. + +"I believe I know the cause of the doctor's emotion. He has just +discovered that Madame de Tremorel was killed by a single blow, and +that the assassins afterward set themselves to disfiguring the body, +when it was nearly cold." + +The doctor's eyes fastened on the detective, with a stupefied +expression. + +"How could you divine that?" he asked. + +"Oh, I didn't guess it alone; I ought to share the honor of the +theory which has enabled us to foresee this fact, with Monsieur +Plantat." + +"Oh," cried the doctor, striking his forehead, "now, I recollect +your advice; in my worry, I must say, I had quite forgotten it. + +"Well," he added, "your foresight is confirmed. Perhaps not so +much time as you suppose elapsed between the first blow and the +rest; but I am convinced that the countess had ceased to live +nearly three hours, when the last blows were struck." + +M. Gendron went to the billiard-table, and slowly raised the sheet, +discovering the head and part of the bust. + +"Let us inform ourselves, Plantat," he said. + +The old justice of the peace took the lamp, and passed to the other +side of the table. His hand trembled so that the globe tingled. +The vacillating light cast gloomy shadows upon the walls. The +countess's face had been carefully bathed, the blood and mud +effaced. The marks of the blows were thus more visible, but they +still found upon that livid countenance, the traces of its beauty. +M. Lecoq stood at the head of the table, leaning over to see more +clearly. + +"The countess," said Dr. Gendron, "received eighteen blows from a +dagger. Of these, but one is mortal; it is this one, the direction +of which is nearly vertical--a little below the shoulder, you see." +He pointed out the wound, sustaining the body in his left arm. The +eyes had preserved a frightful expression. It seemed as if the +half-open mouth were about to cry "Help! Help!" + +Plantat, the man with a heart of stone, turned away his head, and +the doctor, having mastered his first emotion, continued in a +professionally apathetic tone: + +"The blade must have been an inch wide, and eight inches long. All +the other wounds--those on the arms, breast, and shoulders, are +comparatively slight. They must have been inflicted at least two +hours after that which caused death." + +"Good," said M. Lecoq. + +"Observe that I am not positive," returned the doctor quickly. "I +merely state a probability. The phenomena on which I base my own +conviction are too fugitive, too capricious in their nature, to +enable me to be absolutely certain." + +This seemed to disturb M. Lecoq. + +"But, from the moment when--" + +"What I can affirm," interrupted Dr. Gendron, "what I would affirm +under oath, is, that all the wounds on the head, excepting one, were +inflicted after death. No doubt of that whatever--none whatever. +Here, above the eye, is the blow given while the countess was alive." + +"It seems to me, Doctor," observed M. Lecoq, "that we may conclude +from the proved fact that the countess, after death, was struck by +a flat implement, that she had also ceased to live when she was +mutilated by the knife." + +M. Gendron reflected a moment. + +"It is possible that you are right; as for me, I am persuaded of it. +Still the conclusions in my report will not be yours. The physician +consulted by the law, should only pronounce upon patent, +demonstrated facts. If he has a doubt, even the slightest, he +should hold his tongue. I will say more; if there is any +uncertainty, my opinion is that the accused, and not the prosecution, +should have the benefit of it." + +This was certainly not the detective's opinion, but he was cautious +not to say so. He had followed Dr. Gendron with anxious attention, +and the contraction of his face showed the travail of his mind. + +"It seems to me now possible," said he, "to determine how and where +the countess was struck." + +The doctor had covered the body, and Plantat had replaced the lamp +on the little table. Both asked M. Lecoq to explain himself. + +"Very well," resumed the detective. "The direction of the wound +proves to me that the countess was in her chamber taking tea, +seated, her body inclined a little forward, when she was murdered. +The assassin came up behind her with his arm raised; he chose his +position coolly, and struck her with terrific force. The violence +of the blow was such that the victim fell forward, and in the fall, +her forehead struck the end of the table; she thus gave herself the +only fatal blow which we have discovered on the head." + +M. Gendron looked from one to the other of his companions, who +exchanged significant glances. Perhaps he suspected the game they +were playing. + +"The crime must evidently have been committed as you say," said he. + +There was another embarrassing silence. M. Lecoq's obstinate +muteness annoyed Plantat, who finally asked him: + +"Have you seen all you want to see?" + +"All for to-day; I shall need daylight for what remains. I am +confident, indeed, that with the exception of one detail that +worries me, I have the key to the mystery." + +"We must be here, then, early to-morrow morning." + +"I will be here at any hour you will name." + +"Your search finished, we will go together to Monsieur Domini, at +Corbeil." + +"I am quite at your orders." + +There was another pause. + +M. Plantat perceived that M. Lecoq guessed his thoughts; and did +not understand the detective's capriciousness; a little while before, +he had been very loquacious, but now held his tongue. M. Lecoq, on +the other hand, was delighted to puzzle the old man a little, and +formed the intention to astonish him the next morning, by giving +him a report which should faithfully reflect all his ideas. +Meanwhile he had taken out his lozenge-box, and was intrusting a +hundred secrets to the portrait. + +"Well," said the doctor, "there remains nothing more to be done +except to retire." + +"I was just going to ask permission to do so," said M. Lecoq. "I +have been fasting ever since morning." + +M. Plantat now took a bold step. + +"Shall you return to Paris to-night, Monsieur Lecoq?" asked he, +abruptly. + +"No; I came prepared to remain over-night; I've brought my +night-gown, which I left, before coming up here, at the little +roadside inn below. I shall sup and sleep there." + +"You will be poorly off at the Faithful Grenadier," said the old +justice of the peace. "You will do better to come and dine with me." + +"You are really too good, Monsieur--" + +"Besides, we have a good deal to say, and so you must remain the +night with me; we will get your night-clothes as we pass along." + +M. Lecoq bowed, flattered and grateful for the invitation. + +"And I shall carry you off, too, Doctor," continued M. Plantat, +"whether you will or not. Now, don't say no. If you insist on +going to Corbeil to-night, we will carry you over after supper." + +The operation of fixing the seals was speedily concluded; narrow +strips of parchment, held by large waxen seals, were affixed to all +the doors, as well as to the bureau in which the articles gathered +for the purposes of the investigation had been deposited. + + + + +IX + +Despite the haste they made, it was nearly ten o'clock when M. +Plantat and his guests quitted the chateau of Valfeuillu. Instead +of taking the high road, they cut across a pathway which ran along +beside Mme. de Lanascol's park, and led diagonally to the wire +bridge; this was the shortest way to the inn where M. Lecoq had left +his slight baggage. As they went along, M. Plantat grew anxious +about his good friend, M. Courtois. + +"What misfortune can have happened to him?" said he to Dr. Gendron. + +"Thanks to the stupidity of that rascal of a servant, we learned +nothing at all. This letter from Mademoiselle Laurence has caused +the trouble, somehow." + +They had now reached the Faithful Grenadier. + +A big red-faced fellow was smoking a long pipe at the door, his +back against the house. He was talking with a railway employee. +It was the landlord. + +"Well, Monsieur Plantat," he cried, "what a horrible affair this is! +Come in, come in; there are several folks in the hall who saw the +assassins. What a villain old Bertaud is! And that Guespin; ah, I +would willingly trudge to Corbeil to see them put up the scaffold!" + +"A little charity, Master Lenfant; you forget that both these men +were among your best customers." + +Master Lenfant was confused by this reply; but his native impudence +soon regained the mastery. + +"Fine customers, parbleu!" he answered, "this thief of a Guespin +has got thirty francs of mine which I'll never see again." + +"Who knows?" said Plantat, ironically. "Besides, you are going to +make more than that to-night, there's so much company at the Orcival +festival." + +During this brief conversation, M. Lecoq entered the inn for his +night-gown. His office being no longer a secret, he was not now +welcomed as when he was taken for a simple retired haberdasher. +Mme. Lenfant, a lady who had no need of her husband's aid to show +penniless sots the door, scarcely deigned to answer him. When he +asked how much he owed, she responded, with a contemptuous gesture, +"Nothing." When he returned to the door, his night-gown in hand, +M. Plantat said: + +"Let's hurry, for I want to get news of our poor mayor." + +The three hastened their steps, and the old justice of the peace, +oppressed with sad presentiments, and trying to combat them, +continued: + + "If anything had happened at the mayor's, I should certainly have +been informed of it by this time. Perhaps Laurence has written that +she is ill, or a little indisposed. Madame Courtois, who is the best +woman in the world, gets excited about nothing; she probably wanted +to send her husband for Laurence at once. You'll see that it's some +false alarm." + +No; some catastrophe had happened. A number of the village women +were standing before the mayor's gate. Baptiste, in the midst of +the group, was ranting and gesticulating. But at M. Plantat's +approach, the women fled like a troop of frightened gulls. The old +man's unexpected appearance annoyed the placid Baptiste not a little, +for he was interrupted, by the sudden departure of his audience, in +the midst of a superb oratorical flight. As he had a great fear of +M. Plantat, however, he dissimulated his chagrin with his habitual +smile. + +"Ah, sir," cried he, when M. Plantat was three steps off, "ah, what +an affair! I was going for you--" + +"Does your master wish me?" + +"More than you can think. He ran so fast from Valfeuillu here, that +I could scarcely keep up with him. He's not usually fast, you know; +but you ought to have seen him this time, fat as he is!" + +M. Plantat stamped impatiently. + +"Well, we got here at last," resumed the man, "and monsieur rushed +into the drawing-room, where he found madame sobbing like a Magdalene. +He was so out of breath he could scarcely speak. His eyes stuck +out of his head, and he stuttered like this--'What's-the-matter? +What's the-matter?' Madame, who couldn't speak either, held out +mademoiselle's letter, which she had in her hand." + +The three auditors were on coals of fire; the rogue perceived it, +and spoke more and more slowly. + +"Then monsieur took the letter, went to the window, and at a glance +read it through. He cried out hoarsely, thus: 'Oh!' then he went +to beating the air with his hands, like a swimming dog; then he +walked up and down and fell, pouf! like a bag, his face on the floor. +That was all." + +"Is he dead?" cried all three in the same breath. + +"Oh, no; you shall see," responded Baptiste, with a placid smile. + +M. Lecoq was a patient man, but not so patient as you might think. +Irritated by the manner of Baptiste's recital, he put down his +bundle, seized the man's arm with his right hand, while with the +left he whisked a light flexible cane, and said: + +"Look here, fellow, I want you to hurry up, you know." + +That was all he said; the servant was terribly afraid of this little +blond man, with a strange voice, and a fist harder than a vice. He +went on very rapidly this time, his eye fixed on M. Lecoq's rattan. + +"Monsieur had an attack of vertigo. All the house was in confusion; +everybody except I, lost their heads; it occurred to me to go for +a doctor, and I started off for one--for Doctor Gendron, whom I +knew to be at the chateau, or the doctor near by, or the apothecary-- +it mattered not who. By good luck, at the street corner, I came +upon Robelot, the bone-setter--'Come, follow me,' said I. He did +so; sent away those who were tending monsieur, and bled him in both +arms. Shortly after, he breathed, then he opened his eyes, and +then he spoke. Now he is quite restored, and is lying on one of +the drawing-room lounges, crying with all his might. He told me +he wanted to see Monsieur Plantat, and I--" + +"And--Mademoiselle Laurence?" asked M. Plantat, with a trembling +voice. Baptiste assumed a tragic pose. + +"Ah, gentlemen," said he, "don't ask me about her--'tis +heartrending!" + +The doctor and M. Plantat heard no more, but hurried in; M. Lecoq +followed, having confided his night-gown to Baptiste, with, "Carry +that to M. Plantat's--quick!" + +Misfortune, when it enters a house, seems to leave its fatal imprint +on the very threshold. Perhaps it is not really so, but it is the +feeling which those who are summoned to it experience. As the +physician and the justice of the peace traversed the court-yard, +this house, usually so gay and hospitable, presented a mournful +aspect. Lights were seen coming and going in the upper story. +Mlle. Lucile, the mayor's youngest daughter, had had a nervous +attack, and was being tended. A young girl, who served as Laurence's +maid, was seated in the vestibule, on the lower stair, weeping +bitterly. Several domestics were there also, frightened, motionless, +not knowing what to do in all this fright. The drawing-room door +was wide open; the room was dimly lighted by two candles; Mme. +Courtois lay rather than sat in a large arm-chair near the fireplace. +Her husband was reclining on a lounge near the windows at the rear +of the apartment. They had taken off his coat and had torn away +his shirt-sleeves and flannel vest, when he was to be bled. There +were strips of cotton wrapped about his naked arms. A small man, +habited like a well-to-do Parisian artisan, stood near the door, +with an embarrassed expression of countenance. It was Robelot, who +had remained, lest any new exigency for his services should arise. + +The entrance of his friend startled M. Courtois from the sad stupor +into which he had been plunged. He got up and staggered into the +arms of the worthy Plantat, saying, in a broken voice: + +"Ah, my friend, I am most miserable--most wretched!" + +The poor mayor was so changed as scarcely to be recognizable. He +was no longer the happy man of the world, with smiling face, firm +look, the pride of which betrayed plainly his self-importance and +prosperity. In a few hours he had grown twenty years older. He +was broken, overwhelmed; his thoughts wandered in a sea of +bitterness. He could only repeat, vacantly, again and again: + +"Wretched! most wretched!" + +M. Plantat was the right sort of a friend for such a time. He led +M. Courtois back to the sofa and sat down beside him, and taking +his hand in his own, forced him to calm his grief. He recalled to +him that his wife, the companion of his life, remained to him, to +mourn the dear departed with him. Had he not another daughter to +cherish? But the poor man was in no state to listen to all this. + +"Ah, my friend," said he shuddering, "you do not know all! If she +had died here, in the midst of us, comforted by our tender care, +my despair would be great; but nothing compared with that which +now tortures me. If you only knew--" + +M. Plantat rose, as if terrified by what he was about to hear. + +"But who can tell," pursued the wretched man, "where or how she +died? Oh, my Laurence, was there no one to hear your last agony +and save you? What has become of you, so young and happy?" + +He rose, shaking with anguish and cried: + +"Let us go, Plantat, and look for her at the Morgue." Then he fell +back again, muttering the lugubrious word, "the Morgue." + +The witnesses of this scene remained, mute, motionless, rigid, +holding their breath. The stifled sobs and groans of Mme. Courtois +and the little maid alone broke the silence. + +"You know that I am your friend--your best friend," said M. Plantat, +softly; "confide in me--tell me all." + +"Well," commenced M. Courtois, "know"--but his tears choked his +utterance, and he could not go on. Holding out a crumpled letter, +wet with tears, he stammered: + +"Here, read--it is her last letter." + +M. Plantat approached the table, and, not without difficulty, read: + + "DEARLY BELOVED PARENTS-- + + "Forgive, forgive, I beseech you, your unhappy + daughter, the distress she is about to cause you. Alas! + I have been very guilty, but the punishment is terrible! + In a day of wandering, I forgot all--the example and + advice of my dear, sainted mother, my most sacred + duty, and your tenderness. I could not, no, I could not + resist him who wept before me in swearing for me an + eternal love--and who has abandoned me. Now, all + is over; I am lost, lost. I cannot long conceal my + dreadful sin. Oh, dear parents, do not curse me. I + am your daughter--I cannot bear to face contempt, I + will not survive my dishonor. + + "When this letter reaches you, I shall have ceased to + live; I shall have quitted my aunt's, and shall have + gone far away, where no one will find me. There I + shall end my misery and despair. Adieu, then, oh, + beloved parents, adieu! I would that I could, for the + last time, beg your forgiveness on my knees. My dear + mother, my good father, have pity on a poor wanderer; + pardon me, forgive me. Never let my sister Lucile + know. Once more, adieu--I have courage--honor + commands! For you is the last prayer and supreme + thought of your poor LAURENCE." + + +Great tears rolled silently down the old man's cheeks as he +deciphered this sad letter. A cold, mute, terrible anger shrivelled +the muscles of his face. When he had finished, he said, in a hoarse +voice: + +"Wretch!" + +M. Courtois heard this exclamation. + +"Ah, yes, wretch indeed," he cried, "this vile villain who has crept +in in the dark, and stolen my dearest treasure, my darling child! +Alas, she knew nothing of life. He whispered into her ear those +fond words which make the hearts of all young girls throb; she had +faith in him; and now he abandons her. Oh, if I knew who he was-- +if I knew--" + +He suddenly interrupted himself. A ray of intelligence had just +illumined the abyss of despair into which he had fallen. + +"No," said he, "a young girl is not thus abandoned, when she has a +dowry of a million, unless for some good reason. Love passes away; +avarice remains. The infamous wretch was not free--he was married. +He could only be the Count de Tremorel. It is he who has killed +my child." + +The profound silence which succeeded proved to him that his +conjecture was shared by those around him. + +"I was blind, blind!" cried he. "For I received him at my house, +and called him my friend. Oh, have I not a right to a terrible +vengeance?" + +But the crime at Valfeuillu occurred to him; and it was with a tone +of deep disappointment that he resumed: + +"And not to be able to revenge myself! I could riot, then, kill +him with my own hands, see him suffer for hours, hear him beg for +mercy! He is dead. He has fallen under the blows of assassins, +less vile than himself." + +The doctor and M. Plantat strove to comfort the unhappy man; but +he went on, excited more and more by the sound of his own voice. + +"Oh, Laurence, my beloved, why did you not confide in me? You +feared my anger, as if a father would ever cease to love his child. +Lost, degraded, fallen to the ranks of the vilest, I would still +love thee. Were you not my own? Alas! you knew not a father's +heart. A father does not pardon; he forgets. You might still have +been happy, my lost love." + +He wept; a thousand memories of the time when Laurence was a child +and played about his knees recurred to his mind; it seemed as though +it were but yesterday. + +"Oh, my daughter, was it that you feared the world--the wicked, +hypocritical world? But we should have gone away. I should have +left Orcival, resigned my office. We should have settled down far +away, in the remotest corner of France, in Germany, in Italy. With +money all is possible. All? No! I have millions, and yet my +daughter has killed herself." + +He concealed his face in his hands; his sobs choked him. + +"And not to know what has become of her!" he continued. "Is it not +frightful? What death did she choose? You remember, Doctor, and +you, Plantat, her beautiful curls about her pure forehead, her great, +trembling eyes, her long curved lashes? Her smile--do you know, it +was the sun's ray of my life. I so loved her voice, and her mouth +so fresh, which gave me such warm, loving kisses. Dead! Lost! And +not to know what has become of her sweet form--perhaps abandoned in +the mire of some river. Do you recall the countess's body this +morning? It will kill me! Oh, my child--that I might see her one +hour--one minute--that I might give her cold lips one last kiss!" + +M. Lecoq strove in vain to prevent a warm tear which ran from his +eyes, from falling. M. Lecoq was a stoic on principle, and by +profession. But the desolate words of the poor father overcame +him. Forgetting that his emotion would be seen, he came out from +the shadow where he had stood, and spoke to M. Courtois: + +"I, Monsieur Lecoq, of the detectives, give you my honor that I +will find Mademoiselle Laurence's body." + +The poor mayor grasped desperately at this promise, as a drowning +man to a straw. + +"Oh, yes, we will find her, won't we? You will help me. They say +that to the police nothing is impossible--that they see and know +everything. We will see what has become of my child." + +He went toward M. Lecoq, and taking him by the hand: + +"Thank you," added he, "you are a good man. I received you ill a +while ago, and judged you with foolish pride: forgive me. We will +succeed--you will see, we will aid each other, we will put all the +police on the scent, we will search through France, money will do +it--I have it--I have millions--take them--" + +His energies were exhausted: he staggered and fell heavily on the +lounge. + +"He must not remain here long," muttered the doctor in Plantat's +ear, "he must get to bed. A brain fever, after such excitement, +would not surprise me." + +The old justice of the peace at once approached Mme. Courtois, who +still reclined in the arm-chair, apparently having seen or heard +nothing of what had passed, and oblivious in her grief. + +"Madame!" said he, "Madame!" + +She shuddered and rose, with a wandering air. + +"It is my fault," said she, "my miserable fault! A mother should +read her daughter's heart as in a book. I did not suspect Laurence's +secret; I am a most unhappy mother." + +The doctor also came to her. + +"Madame," said he, in an imperious tone, "your husband must be +persuaded to go to bed at once. His condition is very serious, and +a little sleep is absolutely necessary. I will have a potion +prepared--" + +"Oh, my God!" cried the poor lady, wringing her hands, in the fear +of a new misfortune, as bitter as the first; which, however, +restored her to her presence of mind. She called the servants, who +assisted the mayor to regain his chamber. Mme. Courtois also +retired, followed by the doctor. Three persons only remained in +the drawing-room--Plantat, Lecoq, and Robelot, who still stood +near the door. + +"Poor Laurence!" murmured Plantat. "Poor girl!" + +"It seems to me that her father is most to be pitied," remarked M. +Lecoq. "Such a blow, at his age, may be more than he can bear. +Even should he recover, his life is broken." + +"I had a sort of presentiment," said the other, "that this misfortune +would come. I had guessed Laurence's secret, but I guessed it too +late." + +"And you did not try--" + +"What? In a delicate case like this, when the honor of a family +depends on a word, one must be circumspect. What could I do? Put +Courtois on his guard? Clearly not. He would have refused to +believe me. He is one of those men who will listen to nothing, and +whom the brutal fact alone can undeceive." + +"You might have dealt with the Count de Tremorel." + +"The count would have denied all. He would have asked what right +I had to interfere in his affairs." + +"But the girl?" + +M. Plantat sighed heavily. + +"Though I detest mixing up with what does not concern me, I did try +one day to talk with her. With infinite precaution and delicacy, +and without letting her see that I knew all, I tried to show her +the abyss near which she was drawing." + +"And what did she reply?" + +"Nothing. She laughed and joked, as women who have a secret which +they wish to conceal, do. Besides, I could not get a quarter of +an hour alone with her, and it was necessary to act, I knew--for I +was her best friend--before committing this imprudence of speaking +to her. Not a day passed that she did not come to my garden and +cull my rarest flowers--and I would not, look you, give one of my +flowers to the Pope himself. She had instituted me her florist in +ordinary. For her sake I collected my briars of the Cape--" + +He was talking on so wide of his subject that M. Lecoq could not +repress a roguish smile. The old man was about to proceed when he +heard a noise in the hall, and looking up he observed Robelot for +the first time. His face at once betrayed his great annoyance. + +"You were there, were you?" he said. + +The bone-setter smiled obsequiously. + +"Yes, Monsieur, quite at your service." + +"You have been listening, eh?" + +"Oh, as to that, I was waiting to see if Madame Courtois had any +commands for me." + +A sudden reflection occurred to M. Plantat; the expression of his +eye changed. He winked at M. Lecoq to call his attention, and +addressing the bone-setter in a milder tone, said: "Come here, +Master Robelot." + +Lecoq had read the man at a glance. Robelot was a small, +insignificant-looking man, but really of herculean strength. His +hair, cut short behind, fell over his large, intelligent forehead. +His eyes shone with the fire of covetousness, and expressed, when +he forgot to guard them, a cynical boldness. A sly smile was always +playing about his thin lips, beneath which there was no beard. A +little way off, with his slight figure and his beardless face, he +looked like a Paris gamin--one of those little wretches who are +the essence of all corruption, whose imagination is more soiled +than the gutters where they search for lost pennies. + +Robelot advanced several steps, smiling and bowing. "Perhaps," +said he, "Monsieur has, by chance, need of me?" + +"None whatever, Master Robelot, I only wish to congratulate you on +happening in so apropos, to bleed Monsieur Courtois. Your lancet +has, doubtless, saved his life." + +"It's quite possible." + +"Monsieur Courtois is generous--he will amply recompense this +great service." + +"Oh, I shall ask him nothing. Thank God, I want nobody's help. +If I am paid my due, I am content." + +"I know that well enough; you are prosperous--you ought to be +satisfied." + +M. Plantat's tone was friendly, almost paternal. He was deeply +interested, evidently, in Robelot's prosperity. + +"Satisfied!" resumed the bone-setter. "Not so much as you might +think. Life is very dear for poor people." + +"But, haven't you just purchased an estate near d'Evry?" + +"Yes." + +"And a nice place, too, though a trifle damp. Happily you have +stone to fill it in with, on the land that you bought of the widow +Frapesle." + +Robelot had never seen the old justice of the peace so talkative, +so familiar; he seemed a little surprised. + +"Three wretched pieces of land!" said he. + +"Not so bad as you talk about. Then you've also bought something +in the way of mines, at auction, haven't you?" + +"Just a bunch of nothing at all." + +"True, but it pays well. It isn't so bad, you see, to be a doctor +without a diploma." + +Robelot had been several times prosecuted for illegal practicing; +so he thought he ought to protest against this. + +"If I cure people," said he, "I'm not paid for it." + +"Then your trade in herbs isn't what has enriched you." + +The conversation was becoming a cross-examination. The bone-setter +was beginning to be restless. + +"Oh, I make something out of the herbs," he answered. + +"And as you are thrifty, you buy land." + +"I've also got some cattle and horses, which bring in something. +I raise horses, cows, and sheep." + +"Also without diploma?" + +Robelot waxed disdainful. + +"A piece of parchment does not make science. I don't fear the men +of the schools. I study animals in the fields and the stable, +without bragging. I haven't my equal for raising them, nor for +knowing their diseases." + +M. Plantat's tone became more and more winning. + +"I know that you are a bright fellow, full of experience. Doctor +Gendron, with whom you served, was praising your cleverness a +moment ago." + +The bone-setter shuddered, not so imperceptibly as to escape +Plantat, who continued: "Yes, the good doctor said he never had +so intelligent an assistant. 'Robelot,' said he, 'has such an +aptitude for chemistry, and so much taste for it besides, that +he understands as well as I many of the most delicate +operations.'" + +"Parbleu! I did my best, for I was well paid, and I was always fond +of learning." + +"And you were an apt scholar at Doctor Gendron's, Master Robelot; +he makes some very curious studies. His work and experience on +poisons are above all remarkable." + +Robelot's uneasiness became apparent; his look wavered. + +"Yes;" returned he, "I have seen some strange experiments." + +"Well, you see, you may think yourself lucky--for the doctor is +going to have a splendid chance to study this sort of thing, and +he will undoubtedly want you to assist him." + +But Robelot was too shrewd not to have already guessed that this +cross-examination had a purpose. What was M. Plantat after? he +asked himself, not without a vague terror. And, going over in +his mind the questions which had been asked, and the answers he had +given, and to what these questions led, he trembled. He thought +to escape further questioning by saying: + +"I am always at my old master's orders when he needs me." + +"He'll need you, be assured," said M. Plantat, who added, in a +careless tone, which his rapid glance at Robelot belied, "The +interest attaching to this case will be intense, and the task +difficult. Monsieur Sauvresy's body is to be disinterred." + +Robelot was certainly prepared for something strange, and he was +armed with all his audacity. But the name of Sauvresy fell upon +his head like the stroke of a club, and he stammered, in a choked +voice: + +"Sauvresy!" + +M. Plantat had already turned his head, and continued in an +indifferent tone: + +"Yes, Sauvresy is to be exhumed. It is suspected that his death +was not wholly a natural one. You see, justice always has its +suspicions." + +Robelot leaned against the wall so as not to fall. M. Plantat +proceeded: + +"So Doctor Gendron has been applied to. He has, as you know, found +reactive drugs which betray the presence of an alkaloid, whatever +it may be, in the substances submitted to him for analysis. He has +spoken to me of a certain sensitive paper--" + +Appealing to all his energy, Robelot forced himself to stand up and +resume a calm countenance. + +"I know Doctor Gendron's process," said he, "but I don't see who +could be capable of the suspicions of which you speak." + +"I think there are more than suspicions," resumed M. Plantat. +"Madame de Tremorel, you know, has been murdered: her papers have, +of course, been examined; letters have been found, with very +damaging revelations, receipts, and so on." + +Robelot, apparently, was once more self-possessed; he forced himself +to answer: + +"Bast! let us hope that justice is in the wrong." + +Then, such was this man's self-control, despite a nervous trembling +which shook his whole body as the wind does the leaves, that he +added, constraining his thin lips to form a smile: + +"Madame Courtois does not come down; I am waited for at home, and +will drop in again to-morrow. Good-evening, gentlemen." + +He walked away, and soon the sand in the court was heard creaking +with his steps. As he went, he staggered like a drunken man. + +M. Lecoq went up to M. Plantat, and taking off his hat: + +"I surrender," said he, "and bow to you; you are great, like my +master, the great Tabaret." + +The detective's amour-propre was clearly aroused; his professional +zeal was inspired; he found himself before a great crime--one of +those crimes which triple the sale of the Gazette of the Courts. +Doubtless many of its details escaped him: he was ignorant of the +starting-point; but he saw the way clearing before him. He had +surprised Plantat's theory, and had followed the train of his +thought step by step; thus he discovered the complications of the +crime which seemed so simple to M. Domini. His subtle mind had +connected together all the circumstances which had been disclosed +to him during the day, and now he sincerely admired the old +justice of the peace. As he gazed at his beloved portrait, he +thought, "Between the two of us--this old fox and I--we will +unravel the whole web." He would not, however, show himself to be +inferior to his companion. + +"Monsieur," said he, "while you were questioning this rogue, who +will be very useful to us, I did not lose any time. I've been +looking about, under the furniture and so on, and have found this +slip of paper." + +"Let's see." + +"It is the envelope of the young lady's letter. Do you know where +her aunt, whom she was visiting, lives?" + +"At Fontainebleau, I believe." +"Ah; well, this envelope is stamped 'Paris,' Saint-Lazare branch +post-office. I know this stamp proves nothing--" + +"It is, of course, an indication." + +"That is not all; I have read the letter itself--it was here on +the table." + +M. Plantat frowned involuntarily. + +"It was, perhaps, a liberty," resumed M. Lecoq, "but the end +justifies the means. Well, you have read this letter; but have you +studied it, examined the hand-writing, weighed the words, remarked +the context of the sentences?" + +"Ah," cried Plantat, "I was not mistaken then--you had the same +idea strike you that occurred to me!" + +And, in the energy of his excitement he seized the detective's hands +and pressed them as if he were an old friend. They were about to +resume talking when a step was heard on the staircase; and presently +Dr. Gendron appeared. + +"Courtois is better," said he, "he is in a doze, and will recover." + +"We have nothing more, then, to keep us here," returned M. Plantat. +"Let's be off. Monsieur Lecoq must be half dead with hunger." + +As they went away, M. Lecoq slipped Laurence's letter, with the +envelope, into his pocket. + + + + +X + +M. Plantat's house was small and narrow; a philosopher's house. +Three large rooms on the ground-floor, four chambers in the first +story, an attic under the roof for the servants, composed all its +apartments. Everywhere the carelessness of a man who has withdrawn +from the world into himself, for years, ceasing to have the least +interest in the objects which surround him, was apparent. The +furniture was shabby, though it had been elegant; the mouldings +had come off, the clocks had ceased to keep time, the chairs showed +the stuffing of their cushions, the curtains, in places, were faded +by the sun. The library alone betrayed a daily care and attention. + +Long rows of books in calf and gilt were ranged on the carved oaken +shelves, a movable table near the fireplace contained M. Plantat's +favorite books, the discreet friends of his solitude. A spacious +conservatory, fitted with every accessory and convenience, was his +only luxury. In it flourished one hundred and thirty-seven +varieties of briars. + +Two servants, the widow Petit, cook and house-keeper, and Louis, +gardener, inhabited the house. If they did not make it a noisy one, +it was because Plantat, who talked little, detested also to hear +others talk. Silence was there a despotic law. It was very hard +for Mme. Petit, especially at first. She was very talkative, so +talkative that when she found no one to chat with, she went to +confession; to confess was to chat. She came near leaving the place +twenty times; but the thought of an assured pension restrained her. +Gradually she became accustomed to govern her tongue, and to this +cloistral silence. But she revenged herself outside for the +privations of the household, and regained among the neighbors the +time lost at home. + +She was very much wrought up on the day of the murder. At eleven +o'clock, after going out for news, she had prepared monsieur's +dinner; but he did not appear. She waited one, two hours, five +hours, keeping her water boiling for the eggs; no monsieur. She +wanted to send Louis to look for him, but Louis being a poor talker +and not curious, asked her to go herself. The house was besieged +by the female neighbors, who, thinking that Mme. Petit ought to be +well posted, came for news; no news to give. + +Toward five o'clock, giving up all thought of breakfast, she began +to prepare for dinner. But when the village bell struck eight +o'clock, monsieur had not made his appearance. At nine, the good +woman was beside herself, and began to scold Louis, who had just +come in from watering the garden, and, seated at the kitchen table, +was soberly eating a plate of soup. + +The bell rung. + +"Ah, there's monsieur, at last." + +No, it was not monsieur, but a little boy, whom M. Plantat had sent +from Valfeuillu to apprise Mme. Petit that he would soon return, +bringing with him two guests who would dine and sleep at the house. +The worthy woman nearly fainted. It was the first time that M. +Plantat had invited anyone to dinner for five years. There was +some mystery at the bottom of it--so thought Mme. Petit, and her +anger doubled with her curiosity. + +"To order a dinner at this hour," she grumbled. "Has he got +common-sense, then?" But reflecting that time pressed, she +continued: + +"Go along, Louis; this is not the moment for two feet to stay in +one shoe. Hurry up, and wring three chickens' heads; see if there +ain't some ripe grapes in the conservatory; bring on some preserves; +fetch some wine from the cellar!" The dinner was well advanced +when the bell rung again. This time Baptiste appeared, in exceeding +bad humor, bearing M. Lecoq's night-gown. + +"See here," said he to the cook, "what the person, who is with your +master, gave me to bring here." + +"What person?" + +"How do I know? He's a spy sent down from Paris about this +Valfeuillu affair; not much good, probably--ill-bred--a brute--and +a wretch." + +"But he's not alone with monsieur?" + +"No; Doctor Gendron is with them." + +Mme. Petit burned to get some news out of Baptiste; but Baptiste +also burned to get back and know what was taking place at his +master's--so off he went, without having left any news behind. + +An hour or more passed, and Mme. Petit had just angrily declared +to Louis that she was going to throw the dinner out the window, +when her master at last appeared, followed by his guests. They had +not exchanged a word after they left the mayor's. Aside from the +fatigues of the evening, they wished to reflect, and to resume their +self-command. Mme. Petit found it useless to question their faces-- +they told her nothing. But she did not agree with Baptiste about +M. Lecoq: she thought him good-humored, and rather silly. Though +the party was less silent at the dinner-table, all avoided, as if +by tacit consent, any allusion to the events of the day. No one +would ever have thought that they had just been witnesses of, almost +actors in, the Valfeuillu drama, they were so calm, and talked so +glibly of indifferent things. From time to time, indeed, a question +remained unanswered, or a reply came tardily; but nothing of the +sensations and thoughts, which were concealed beneath the uttered +commonplaces, appeared on the surface. + +Louis passed to and fro behind the diners, his white cloth on his +arm, carving and passing the wine. Mme. Petit brought in the +dishes, and came in thrice as often as was necessary, her ears wide +open, leaving the door ajar as often as she dared. Poor woman! +she had prepared an excellent dinner, and nobody paid any attention +to it. + +M. Lecoq was fond of tit-bits; yet, when Louis placed on the table +a dish of superb grapes--quite out of season--his mouth did not +so much as expand into a smile. Dr. Gendron would have been +puzzled to say what he had eaten. The dinner was nearly over, when +M. Plantat began to be annoyed by the constraint which the presence +of the servants put upon the party. He called to the cook: + +"You will give us our coffee in the library, and may then retire, +as well as Louis." + +"But these gentlemen do not know their rooms," insisted Mme. Petit, +whose eavesdropping projects were checked by this order. "They will, +perhaps, need something." + +"I will show them their rooms," said M. Plantat, dryly. "And if +they need anything, I shall be here." + +They went into the library. M. Plantat brought out a box of cigars +and passed them round: + +"It will be healthful to smoke a little before retiring." + +M. Lecoq lit an aromatic weed, and remarked: + +"You two may go to bed if you like; I am condemned, I see, to a +sleepless night. But before I go to writing, I wish to ask you a +few things, Monsieur Plantat." + +M. Plantat bowed in token of assent. + +"We must resume our conversation," continued the detective, "and +compare our inferences. All our lights are not too much to throw +a little daylight upon this affair, which is one of the darkest I +have ever met with. The situation is dangerous, and time presses. +On our acuteness depends the fate of several innocent persons, upon +whom rest very serious charges. We have a theory: but Monsieur +Domini also has one, and his, let us confess, is based upon material +facts, while ours rests upon very disputable sensations and logic." + +"We have more than sensations," responded M. Plantat. + +"I agree with you," said the doctor, "but we must prove it." + +"And I will prove it, parbleu," cried M. Lecoq, eagerly. "The +affair is complicated and difficult--so much the better. Eh! +If it were simple, I would go back to Paris instanter, and to-morrow +I would send you one of my men. I leave easy riddles to infants. +What I want is the inexplicable enigmas, so as to unravel it; a +struggle, to show my strength; obstacles, to conquer them." + +M. Plantat and the doctor looked steadily at the speaker. He was +as if transfigured. It was the same yellow-haired and whiskered +man, in a long overcoat: yet the voice, the physiognomy, the very +features, had changed. His eyes shone with the fire of his +enthusiasm, his voice was metallic and vibrating, his imperious +gesture affirmed the audacity and energy of his resolution. + +"If you think, my friends," pursued he, "that they don't manufacture +detectives like me at so much a year, you are right. When I was +twenty years old, I took service with an astronomer, as his +calculator, after a long course of study. He gave me my breakfasts +and seventy francs a month; by means of which I dressed well, and +covered I know not how many square feet with figures daily." + +M. Lecoq puffed vigorously at his cigar a moment, casting a curious +glance at M. Plantat. Then he resumed: + +"Well, you may imagine that I wasn't the happiest of men. I forgot +to mention that I had two little vices: I loved the women, and I +loved play. All are not perfect. My salary seemed too small, and +while I added up my columns of figures, I was looking about for a +way to make a rapid fortune. There is, indeed, but one means; to +appropriate somebody else's money, shrewdly enough not to be found +out. I thought about it day and night. My mind was fertile in +expedients, and I formed a hundred projects, each more practicable +than the others. I should frighten you if I were to tell you half +of what I imagined in those days. If many thieves of my calibre +existed, you'd have to blot the word 'property' out of the dictionary. +Precautions, as well as safes, would be useless. Happily for men +of property, criminals are idiots." + +"What is he coming to?" thought the doctor. + +"One day, I became afraid of my own thoughts. I had just been +inventing a little arrangement by which a man could rob any banker +whatever of 200,000 francs without any more danger or difficulty +than I raise this cup. So I said to myself, 'Well, my boy, if this +goes on a little longer, a moment will come when, from the idea, +you will naturally proceed to the practice.' Having, however, been +born an honest lad--a mere chance--and being determined to use +the talents which nature had given me, eight days afterward I bid +my astronomer good-morning, and went to the prefecture. My fear +of being a burglar drove me into the police." + +"And you are satisfied with the exchange?" asked Dr. Gendron. + +"I' faith, Doctor, my first regret is yet to come. I am happy, +because I am free to exercise my peculiar faculties with +usefulness to my race. Existence has an enormous attraction for +me, because I have still a passion which overrides all others-- +curiosity." + +The detective smiled, and continued: + +"There are people who have a mania for the theatre. It is like my +own mania. Only, I can't understand how people can take pleasure +in the wretched display of fictions, which are to real life what +a tallow dip is to the sun. It seems to me monstrous that people +can be interested in sentiments which, though well represented, are +fictitious. What! can you laugh at the witticisms of a comedian, +whom you know to be the struggling father of a family? Can you +pity the sad fate of the poor actress who poisons herself, when you +know that on going out you will meet her on the boulevards? It's +pitiable!" + +"Let's shut up the theatres," suggested Dr. Gendron. + +"I am more difficult to please than the public," returned M. Lecoq. +"I must have veritable comedies, or real dramas. My theatre is-- +society. My actors laugh honestly, or weep with genuine tears. +A crime is committed--that is the prologue; I reach the scene, +the first act begins. I seize at a glance the minutest shades of +the scenery. Then I try to penetrate the motives, I group the +characters, I link the episodes to the central fact, I bind in a +bundle all the circumstances. The action soon reaches the crisis, +the thread of my inductions conducts me to the guilty person; I +divine him, arrest him, deliver him up. Then comes the great scene; +the accused struggles, tries tricks, splits straws; but the judge, +armed with the arms I have forged for him, overwhelms the wretch; +he does not confess, but he is confounded. And how many secondary +personages, accomplices, friends, enemies, witnesses are grouped +about the principal criminal! Some are terrible, frightful, gloomy-- +others grotesque. And you know not what the ludicrous in the +horrible is. My last scene is the court of assize. The prosecutor +speaks, but it is I who furnished his ideas; his phrases are +embroideries set around the canvas of my report. The president +submits his questions to the jury; what emotion! The fate of my +drama is being decided. The jury, perhaps, answers, 'Not guilty;' +very well, my piece was bad, I am hissed. If 'Guilty,' on the +contrary, the piece was good, I am applauded, and victorious. The +next day I can go and see my hero, and slapping him on the shoulder, +say to him, 'You have lost, old fellow, I am too much for you!'" + +Was M. Lecoq in earnest now, or was he playing a part? What was +the object of this autobiography? Without appearing to notice the +surprise of his companions, he lit a fresh cigar; then, whether +designedly or not, instead of replacing the lamp with which he lit +it on the table, he put it on one corner of the mantel. Thus M. +Plantat's face was in full view, while that of M. Lecoq remained +in shadow. + +"I ought to confess," he continued, "without false modesty, that I +have rarely been hissed. Like every man I have my Achilles heel. +I have conquered the demon of play, but I have not triumphed over +my passion for woman." + +He sighed heavily, with the resigned gesture of a man who has chosen +his path. "It's this way. There is a woman, before whom I am but +an idiot. Yes, I the detective, the terror of thieves and murderers, +who have divulged the combinations of all the sharpers of all the +nations, who for ten years have swum amid vice and crime; who wash +the dirty linen of all the corruptions, who have measured the depths +of human infamy; I who know all, who have seen and heard all; I, +Lecoq, am before her, more simple and credulous than an infant. She +deceives me--I see it--and she proves that I have seen wrongly. +She lies--I know it, I prove it to her--and I believe her. It is +because this is one of those passions," he added, in a low, +mournful tone, "that age, far from extinguishing, only fans, and to +which the consciousness of shame and powerlessness adds fire. One +loves, and the certainty that he cannot be loved in return is one +of those griefs which you must have felt to know its depth. In a +moment of reason, one sees and judges himself; he says, no, it's +impossible, she is almost a child, I almost an old man. He says +this--but always, in the heart, more potent than reason, than will, +than experience, a ray of hope remains, and he says to himself, +'who knows--perhaps!' He awaits, what--a miracle? There are none, +nowadays. No matter, he hopes on." + +M. Lecoq stopped, as if his emotion prevented his going on. M. +Plantat had continued to smoke mechanically, puffing the smoke out +at regular intervals; but his face seemed troubled, his glance was +unsteady, his hands trembled. He got up, took the lamp from the +mantel and replaced it on the table, and sat down again. The +significance of this scene at last struck Dr. Gendron. + +In short, M. Lecoq, without departing widely from the truth, had +just attempted one of the most daring experiments of his repertoire, +and he judged it useless to go further. He knew now what he wished +to know. After a moment's silence, he shuddered as though awaking +from a dream, and pulling out his watch, said: + +"Par le Dieu! How I chat on, while time flies!" + +"And Guespin is in prison," remarked the doctor. + +"We will have him out," answered the detective, "if, indeed, he is +innocent; for this time I have mastered the mystery, my romance, +if you wish, and without any gap. There is, however, one fact of +the utmost importance, that I by myself cannot explain." + +"What?" asked M. Plantat. + +"Is it possible that Monsieur de Tremorel had a very great interest +in finding something--a deed, a letter, a paper of some sort-- +something of a small size, secreted in his own house?" + +"Yes--that is possible," returned the justice of the peace. + +"But I must know for certain." + +M. Plantat reflected a moment. + +"Well then," he went on, "I am sure, perfectly sure, that if Madame +de Tremorel had died suddenly, the count would have ransacked the +house to find a certain paper, which he knew to be in his wife's +possession, and which I myself have had in my hands." + +"Then," said M. Lecoq, "there's the drama complete. On reaching +Valfeuillu, I, like you, was struck with the frightful disorder of +the rooms. Like you, I thought at first that this disorder was the +result of design. I was wrong; a more careful scrutiny has +convinced me of it. The assassin, it is true, threw everything +into disorder, broke the furniture, hacked the chairs in order to +make us think that some furious villains had been there. But amid +these acts of premeditated violence I have followed up the +involuntary traces of an exact, minute, and I may say patient search. +Everything seemed turned topsy-turvy by chance; articles were broken +open with the hatchet, which might have been opened with the hands; +drawers had been forced which were not shut, and the keys of which +were in the locks. Was this folly? No. For really no corner or +crevice where a letter might be hid has been neglected. The table +and bureau-drawers had been thrown here and there, but the narrow +spaces between the drawers had been examined--I saw proofs of it, +for I found the imprints of fingers on the dust which lay in these +spaces. The books had been thrown pell-mell upon the floor, but +every one of them had been handled, and some of them with such +violence that the bindings were torn off. We found the +mantel-shelves in their places, but every one had been lifted up. +The chairs were not hacked with a sword, for the mere purpose of +ripping the cloth--the seats were thus examined. My conviction +of the certainty that there had been a most desperate search, at +first roused my suspicions. I said to myself, 'The villains have +been looking for the money which was concealed; therefore they did +not belong to the household.'" + +"But," observed the doctor, "they might belong to the house, and +yet not know the money was hidden; for Guespin--" + +"Permit me," interrupted M. Lecoq, "I will explain myself. On the +other hand, I found indications that the assassin must have been +closely connected with Madame de Tremorel--her lover, or her +husband. These were the ideas that then struck me." + +"And now?" + +"Now," responded the detective, "with the certainty that something +besides booty might have been the object of the search, I am not +far from thinking that the guilty man is he whose body is being +searched for--the Count Hector de Tremorel." + +M. Plantat and Dr. Gendron had divined the name; but neither had +as yet dared to utter his suspicions. They awaited this name of +Tremorel; and yet, pronounced as it was in the middle of the night, +in this great sombre room, by this at least strange personage, it +made them shudder with an indescribable fright. + +"Observe," resumed M. Lecoq, "what I say; I believe it to be so. +In my eyes, the count's guilt is only as yet extremely probable. +Let us see if we three can reach the certainty of it. You see, +gentlemen, the inquest of a crime is nothing more nor less than +the solution of a problem. Given the crime, proved, patent, you +commence by seeking out all the circumstances, whether serious or +superficial; the details and the particulars. When these have been +carefully gathered, you classify them, and put them in their order +and date. You thus know the victim, the crime, and the +circumstances; it remains to find the third term of the problem, +that is, x, the unknown quantity--the guilty party. The task is +a difficult one, but not so difficult as is imagined. The object +is to find a man whose guilt explains all the circumstances, all +the details found--all, understand me. Find such a man, and it +is probable--and in nine cases out of ten, the probability becomes +a reality--that you hold the perpetrator of the crime." + +So clear had been M. Lecoq's exposition, so logical his argument, +that his hearers could not repress an admiring exclamation: + +"Very good! Very good!" + +"Let us then examine together if the assumed guilt of the Count de +Tremorel explains all the circumstances of the crime at Valfeuillu." + +He was about to continue when Dr. Gendron, who sat near the window, +rose abruptly. + +"There is someone in the garden," said he. + +All approached the window. The weather was glorious, the night +very clear, and a large open space lay before the library window; +they looked out, but saw no one. + +"You are mistaken, Doctor," said Plantat, resuming his arm-chair. + +M. Lecoq continued: + +"Now let us suppose that, under the influence of certain events +that we will examine presently, Monsieur de Tremorel had made up +his mind to get rid of his wife. The crime once resolved upon, it +was clear that the count must have reflected, and sought out the +means of committing it with impunity; he must have weighed the +circumstances, and estimated the perils of his act. Let us admit, +also, that the events which led him to this extremity were such +that he feared to be disturbed, and that he also feared that a +search would be made for certain things, even should his wife die +a natural death." + +"That is true," said M. Plantat, nodding his head. + +"Monsieur de Tremorel, then, determined to kill his wife, brutally, +with a knife, with the idea of so arranging everything, as to make +it believed that he too had been assassinated; and he also decided +to endeavor to thrust suspicion on an innocent person, or at least, +an accomplice infinitely less guilty than he. + +"He made up his mind in advance, in adopting this course, to +disappear, fly, conceal himself, change his personality; to suppress, +in short, Count Hector de Tremorel, and make for himself, under +another name, a new position and identity. These hypotheses, easily +admitted, suffice to explain the whole series of otherwise +inconsistent circumstances. They explain to us in the first place, +how it was that on the very night of the murder, there was a large +fortune in ready money at Valfeuillu; and this seems to me decisive. +Why, when a man receives sums like this, which he proposes to keep +by him, he conceals the fact as carefully as possible. Monsieur de +Tremorel had not this common prudence. He shows his bundles of +bank-notes freely, handles them, parades them; the servants see +them, almost touch them. He wants everybody to know and repeat +that there is a large sum in the house, easy to take, carry off, +and conceal. And what time of all times, does he choose for this +display? Exactly the moment when he knows, and everyone in the +neighborhood knows, that he is going to pass the night at the +chateau, alone with Madame de Tremorel. + +"For he is aware that all his servants are invited, on the evening +of July 8th to the wedding of the former cook. So well aware of +it is he, that he defrays the wedding expenses, and himself names +the day. You will perhaps say that it was by chance that this +money was sent to Valfeuillu on the very night of the crime. At +the worst that might be admitted. But believe me, there was no +chance about it, and I will prove it. We will go to-morrow to the +count's banker, and will inquire whether the count did not ask him, +by letter or verbally, to send him these funds precisely on July 8th. +Well, if he says yes, if he shows us such a letter, or if he +declares that the money was called for in person, you will confess, +no doubt, that I have more than a probability in favor of my theory." + +Both his hearers bowed in token of assent. + +"So far, then, there is no objection." + +"Not the least," said M. Plantat. + +"My conjectures have also the advantage of shedding light on +Guespin's position. Honestly, his appearance is against him, and +justifies his arrest. Was he an accomplice or entirely innocent? +We certainly cannot yet decide. But it is a fact that he has fallen +into an admirably well-laid trap. The count, in selecting him for +his victim, took all care that every doubt possible should weigh +upon him. I would wager that Monsieur de Tremorel, who knew this +fellow's history, thought that his antecedents would add probability +to the suspicions against him, and would weigh with a terrible +weight in the scales of justice. Perhaps, too, he said to himself +that Guespin would be sure to prove his innocence in the end, and +he only wished to gain time to elude the first search. It is +impossible that we can be deceived. We know that the countess died +of the first blow, as if thunderstruck. She did not struggle; +therefore she could not have torn a piece of cloth off the assassin's +vest. If you admit Guespin's guilt, you admit that he was idiot +enough to put a piece of his vest in his victim's hand; you admit +that he was such a fool as to go and throw this torn and bloody vest +into the Seine, from a bridge, in a place where he might know search +would be made--and all this, without taking the common precaution +of attaching it to a stone to carry it to the bottom. That would +be absurd. + +"To me, then, this piece of cloth, this smeared vest, indicate at +once Guespin's innocence and the count's guilt." + +"But," objected Dr. Gendron, "if Guespin is innocent, why don't +he talk? Why don't he prove an alibi? How was it he had his purse +full of money?" + +"Observe," resumed the detective, "that I don't say he is innocent; +we are still among the probabilities. Can't you suppose that the +count, perfidious enough to set a trap for his servant, was shrewd +enough to deprive him of every means of proving an alibi?" + +"But you yourself deny the count's shrewdness." + +"I beg your pardon; please hear me. The count's plan was excellent, +and shows a superior kind of perversity; the execution alone was +defective. This is because the plan was conceived and perfected +in safety, while when the crime had been committed, the murderer, +distressed, frightened at his danger, lost his coolness and only +half executed his project. But there are other suppositions. It +might be asked whether, while Madame de Tremorel was being murdered, +Guespin might not have been committing some other crime elsewhere." + +This conjecture seemed so improbable to the doctor that he could +not avoid objecting to it. "Oh!" muttered he. + +"Don't forget," replied Lecoq, "that the field of conjectures has +no bounds. Imagine whatever complication of events you may, I am +ready to maintain that such a complication has occurred or will +present itself. Lieuben, a German lunatic, bet that he would +succeed in turning up a pack of cards in the order stated in the +written agreement. He turned and turned ten hours per day for +twenty years. He had repeated the operation 4,246,028 times, when +he succeeded." + +M. Lecoq was about to proceed with another illustration, when M. +Plantat interrupted him by a gesture. + +"I admit your hypotheses; I think they are more than probable-- +they are true." + +M. Lecoq, as he spoke, paced up and down between the window and +the book-shelves, stopping at emphatic words, like a general who +dictates to his aides the plan of the morrow's battle. To his +auditors, he seemed a new man, with serious features, an eye bright +with intelligence, his sentences clear and concise--the Lecoq, in +short, which the magistrates who have employed his talents, would +recognize. + +"Now," he resumed, "hear me. It is ten o'clock at night. No noise +without, the road deserted, the village lights extinguished, the +chateau servants away at Paris. The count and countess are alone +at Valfeuillu. + +"They have gone to their bedroom. + +"The countess has seated herself at the table where tea has been +served. The count, as he talks with her, paces up and down the +chamber. + +"Madame de Tremorel has no ill presentiment; her husband, the past +few days, has been more amiable, more attentive than ever. She +mistrusts nothing, and so the count can approach her from behind, +without her thinking of turning her head. + +"When she hears him coming up softly, she imagines that he is going +to surprise her with a kiss. He, meanwhile, armed with a long dagger, +stands beside his wife. He knows where to strike that the wound may +be mortal. He chooses the place at a glance; takes aim; strikes a +terrible blow--so terrible that the handle of the dagger imprints +itself on both sides of the wound. The countess falls without a +sound, bruising her forehead on the edge of the table, which is +overturned. Is not the position of the terrible wound below the +left shoulder thus explained--a wound almost vertical, its +direction being from right to left?" + +The doctor made a motion of assent. + +"And who, besides a woman's lover or her husband is admitted to her +chamber, or can approach her when she is seated without her turning +round?" + +"That's clear," muttered M. Plantat. + +"The countess is now dead," pursued M. Lecoq. "The assassin's first +emotion is one of triumph. He is at last rid of her who was his wife, +whom he hated enough to murder her, and to change his happy, splendid, +envied existence for a frightful life, henceforth without country, +friend, or refuge, proscribed by all nations, tracked by all the +police, punishable by the laws of all the world! His second thought +is of this letter or paper, this object of small size which he knows +to be in his wife's keeping, which he has demanded a hundred times, +which she would not give up to him, and which he must have." + +"Add," interrupted M. Plantat, "that this paper was one of the +motives of the crime." + +"The count thinks he knows where it is. He imagines that he can +put his hand on it at once. He is mistaken. He looks into all the +drawers and bureaus used by his wife--and finds nothing. He +searches every corner, he lifts up the shelves, overturns +everything in the chamber--nothing. An idea strikes him. Is this +letter under the mantel-shelf? By a turn of the arm he lifts it-- +down the clock tumbles and stops. It is not yet half-past ten." + +"Yes," murmured the doctor, "the clock betrays that." + +"The count finds nothing under the mantel-shelf except the dust, +which has retained traces of his fingers. Then he begins to be +anxious. Where can this paper be, for which he has risked his life? +He grows angry. How search the locked drawers? The keys are on the +carpet--I found them among the debris of the tea service--but he +does not see them. He must have some implement with which to break +open everything. He goes downstairs for a hatchet. The drunkenness +of blood and vengeance is dissipated on the staircase; his terrors +begin. All the dark corners are peopled, now, with those spectres +which form the cortege of assassins; he is frightened, and hurries +on. He soon goes up again, armed with a large hatchet--that found +on the second story--and makes the pieces of wood fly about him. +He goes about like a maniac, rips up the furniture at hazard; but +he pursues a desperate search, the traces of which I have followed, +among the debris. Nothing, always nothing! Everything in the room +is topsy-turvy; he goes into his cabinet and continues the +destruction; the hatchet rises and falls without rest. He breaks +his own bureau, since he may find something concealed there of which +he is ignorant. This bureau belonged to the first husband--to +Sauvresy. He takes out all the books in the library, one by one, +shakes them furiously, and throws them about the floor. The infernal +paper is undiscoverable. His distress is now too great for him to +pursue the search with the least method. His wandering reason no +longer guides him. He staggers, without calculation, from one thing +to another, fumbling a dozen times in the same drawer, while he +completely forgets others just by him. Then he thinks that this +paper may have been hid in the stuffing of a chair. He seizes a +sword, and to be certain, he slashes up the drawing-room chairs and +sofas and those in the other rooms." + +M. Lecoq's voice, accent, gestures, gave a vivid character to his +recital. The hearer might imagine that he saw the crime committed, +and was present at the terrible scenes which he described. His +companions held their breath, unwilling by a movement to distract +his attention. + +"At this moment," pursued he, "the count's rage and terror were at +their height. He had said to himself, when he planned the murder, +that he would kill his wife, get possession of the letter, execute +his plan quickly, and fly. And now all his projects were baffled! +How much time was being lost, when each minute diminished the chances +of escape! Then the probability of a thousand dangers which had not +occurred to him, entered his mind. What if some friend should +suddenly arrive, expecting his hospitality, as had occurred twenty +times? What if a passer-by on the road should notice a light flying +from room to room? Might not one of the servants return? When he +is in the drawing-room, he thinks he hears someone ring at the gate; +such is his terror, that he lets his candle fall--for I have found +the marks of it on the carpet. He hears strange noises, such as +never before assailed his ears; he thinks he hears walking in the +next room; the floor creaks. Is his wife really dead; will she not +suddenly rise up, run to the window, and scream for help? Beset by +these terrors, he returns to the bedroom, seizes his dagger, and +again strikes the poor countess. But his hand is so unsteady that +the wounds are light. You have observed, doctor, that all these +wounds take the same direction. They form right angles with the +body, proving that the victim was lying down when they were +inflicted. Then, in the excess of his frenzy, he strikes the body +with his feet, and his heels form the contusions discovered by the +autopsy." + +M. Lecoq paused to take breath. He not only narrated the drama, he +acted it, adding gesture to word; and each of his phrases made a +scene, explained a fact, and dissipated a doubt. Like all true +artists who wrap themselves up in the character they represent, the +detective really felt something of the sensations which he +interpreted, and his expressive face was terrible in its contortions. + +"That," he resumed, "is the first act of the drama. An irresistible +prostration succeeds the count's furious passion. The various +circumstances which I am describing to you are to be noticed in +nearly all great crimes. The assassin is always seized, after the +murder, with a horrible and singular hatred against his victim, and +he often mutilates the body. Then comes the period of a prostration +so great, of torpor so irresistible, that murderers have been known +literally to go to sleep in the blood, that they have been surprised +sleeping, and that it was with great difficulty that they were +awakened. The count, when he has frightfully disfigured the poor +lady, falls into an arm-chair; indeed, the cloth of one of the +chairs has retained some wrinkles, which shows that someone had sat +in it. What are then the count's thoughts? He reflects on the +long hours which have elapsed, upon the few hours which remain to +him. He reflects that he has found nothing; that he will hardly +have time, before day, to execute his plans for turning suspicion +from him, and assure his safety, by creating an impression that he, +too, has been murdered. And he must fly at once--fly, without that +accursed paper. He summons up his energies, rises, and do you know +what he does? He seizes a pair of scissors and cuts off his long, +carefully cultivated beard." + +"Ah!" interrupted M. Plantat, "that's why you examined the portrait +so closely." + +M. Lecoq was too intent on following the thread of his deductions +to note the interruption. + +"This is one of those vulgar details," pursued he, "whose very +insignificance makes them terrible, when they are attended by +certain circumstances. Now imagine the Count de Tremorel, pale, +covered with his wife's blood, shaving himself before his glass; +rubbing the soap over his face, in that room all topsy-turvy, +while three steps off lies the still warm and palpitating body! +It was an act of terrible courage, believe me, to look at himself +in the glass after a murder--one of which few criminals are +capable. The count's hands, however, trembled so violently that +he could scarcely hold his razor, and his face must have been cut +several times." + +"What!" said Dr. Gendron, "do you imagine that the count spared +the time to shave?" + +"I am positively sure of it, pos-i-tive-ly. A towel on which I +have found one of those marks which a razor leaves when it is +wiped--and one only--has put me on the track of this fact. I +looked about, and found a box of razors, one of which had recently +been used, for it was still moist; and I have carefully preserved +both the towel and the box. And if these proofs are not enough, +I will send to Paris for two of my men, who will find, somewhere in +the house or the garden, both the count's beard and the cloth with +which he wiped his razor. As to the fact which surprises you, +Doctor, it seems to me very natural; more, it is the necessary +result of the plan he adopted. Monsieur de Tremorel has always worn +his full beard: he cuts it off, and his appearance is so entirely +altered, that if he met anyone in his flight, he would not be +recognized." + +The doctor was apparently convinced, for he cried: + +"It's clear--it's evident," + +"Once thus disguised, the count hastens to carry out the rest of +his plan, to arrange everything to throw the law off the scent, and +to make it appear that he, as well as his wife, has been murdered. +He hunts up Guespin's vest, tears it out at the pocket, and puts a +piece of it in the countess's hand. Then taking the body in his +arms, crosswise, he goes downstairs. The wounds bleed frightfully-- +hence the numerous stains discovered all along his path. Reaching +the foot of the staircase he is obliged to put the countess down, +in order to open the garden-door. This explains the large stain +in the vestibule. The count, having opened the door, returns for +the body and carries it in his arms as far as the edge of the lawn; +there he stops carrying it, and drags it by the shoulders, walking +backward, trying thus to create the impression that his own body +has been dragged across there and thrown into the Seine. But the +wretch forgot two things which betray him to us. He did not reflect +that the countess's skirts, in being dragged along the grass, +pressing it down and breaking it for a considerable space, spoiled +his trick. Nor did he think that her elegant and well-curved feet, +encased in small high-heeled boots, would mould themselves in the +damp earth of the lawn, and thus leave against him a proof clearer +than the day." + +M. Plantat rose abruptly. + +"Ah," said he, "you said nothing of this before." + +"Nor of several other things, either. But I was before ignorant of +some facts which I now know; and as I had reason to suppose that +you were better informed than I, I was not sorry to avenge myself +for a caution which seemed to me mysterious." + +"Well, you are avenged," remarked the doctor, smiling. + +"On the other side of the lawn," continued M. Lecoq, "the count +again took up the countess's body. But forgetting the effect of +water when it spirts, or--who knows?--disliking to soil himself, +instead of throwing her violently in the river, he put her down +softly, with great precaution. That's not all. He wished it to +appear that there had been a terrible struggle. What does he do? +Stirs up the sand with the end of his foot. And he thinks that +will deceive the police!" + +"Yes, yes," muttered Plantat, "exactly so--I saw it." + +"Having got rid of the body, the count returns to the house. Time +presses, but he is still anxious to find the paper. He hastens to +take the last measures to assure his safety. He smears his slippers +and handkerchief with blood. He throws his handkerchief and one of +his slippers on the sward, and the other slipper into the river. +His haste explains the incomplete execution of his manoeuvres. He +hurries--and commits blunder after blunder. He does not reflect +that his valet will explain about the empty bottles which he puts +on the table. He thinks he is turning wine into the five glasses-- +it is vinegar, which will prove that no one has drunk out of them. +He ascends, puts forward the hands of the clock, but forgets to put +the hands and the striking bell in harmony. He rumples up the bed, +but he does it awkwardly--and it is impossible to reconcile these +three facts, the bed crumpled, the clock showing twenty minutes past +three, and the countess dressed as if it were mid-day. He adds as +much as he can to the disorder of the room. He smears a sheet with +blood; also the bed-curtains and furniture. Then he marks the door +with the imprint of a bloody hand, too distinct and precise not to +be done designedly. Is there so far a circumstance or detail of +the crime, which does not explain the count's guilt?" + +"There's the hatchet," answered M. Plantat, "found on the second +story, the position of which seemed so strange to you." + +"I am coming to that. There is one point in this mysterious affair, +which, thanks to you, is now clear. We know that Madame de Tremorel, +known to her husband, possessed and concealed a paper or a letter, +which he wanted, and which she obstinately refused to give up in +spite of all his entreaties. You have told us that the anxiety-- +perhaps the necessity--to have this paper, was a powerful motive +of the crime. We will not be rash then in supposing that the +importance of this paper was immense--entirely beyond an ordinary +affair. It must have been, somehow, very damaging to one or the +other. To whom? To both, or only the count? Here I am reduced to +conjectures. It is certain that it was a menace--capable of being +executed at any moment--suspended over the head of him or them +concerned by it. Madame de Tremorel surely regarded this paper +either as a security, or as a terrible arm which put her husband +at her mercy. It was surely to deliver himself from this perpetual +menace that the count killed his wife." + +The logic was so clear, the last words brought the evidence out so +lucidly and forcibly, that his hearers were struck with admiration. +They both cried: + +"Very good!" + +"Now," resumed M. Lecoq, "from the various elements which have +served to form our conviction, we must conclude that the contents +of this letter, if it can be found, will clear away our last doubts, +will explain the crime, and will render the assassin's precautions +wholly useless. The count, therefore, must do everything in the +world, must attempt the impossible, not to leave this danger behind +him. His preparations for flight ended, Hector, in spite of his +deadly peril, of the speeding time, of the coming day, instead of +flying recommences with more desperation than ever his useless +search. Again he goes through all the furniture, the books, the +papers--in vain. Then he determines to search the second story, +and armed with his hatchet, goes up to it. He has already attacked +a bureau, when he hears a cry in the garden. He runs to the window-- +what does he see? Philippe and old Bertaud are standing on the +river-bank under the willows, near the corpse. Can you imagine his +immense terror? Now, there's not a second to lose--he has already +delayed too long. The danger is near, terrible. Daylight has come, +the crime is discovered, they are coming, he sees himself lost +beyond hope. He must fly, fly at once, at the peril of being seen, +met, arrested. He throws the hatchet down violently--it cuts the +floor. He rushes down, slips the bank-notes in his pocket, seizes +Guespin's torn and smeared vest, which he will throw into the river +from the bridge, and saves himself by the garden. Forgetting all +caution, confused, beside himself, covered with blood, he runs, +clears the ditch, and it is he whom old Bertaud sees making for the +forest of Mauprevoir, where he intends to arrange the disorder of +his clothes. For the moment he is safe. But he leaves behind him +this letter, which is, believe me, a formidable witness, which will +enlighten justice and will betray his guilt and the perfidy of his +projects. For he has not found it, but we will find it; it is +necessary for us to have it to defeat Monsieur Domini, and to change +our doubts into certainty." + + + + +XI + +A long silence followed the detective's discourse. Perhaps his +hearers were casting about for objections. At last Dr. Gendron +spoke: + +"I don't see Guespin's part in all this." + +"Nor I, very clearly," answered M. Lecoq. "And here I ought to +confess to you not only the strength, but the weakness also, of the +theory I have adopted. By this method, which consists of +reconstructing the crime before discovering the criminal, I can be +neither right nor wrong by halves. Either all my inferences are +correct, or not one of them is. It's all, or nothing. If I am +right, Guespin has not been mixed up with this crime, at least +directly; for there isn't a single circumstance which suggests +outside aid. If, on the other hand, I am wrong--" + +M. Lecoq paused. He seemed to have heard some unexpected noise +in the garden. + +"But I am not wrong. I have still another charge against the count, +of which I haven't spoken, but which seems to be conclusive." + +"Oh," cried the doctor, "what now?" + +"Two certainties are better than one, and I always doubt. When I +was left alone a moment with Francois, the valet, I asked him if +he knew exactly the number of the count's shoes; he said yes, and +took me to a closet where the shoes are kept. A pair of boots, +with green Russia leather tops, which Francois was sure the count +had put on the previous morning, was missing. I looked for them +carefully everywhere, but could not find them. Again, the blue +cravat with white stripes which the count wore on the 8th, had also +disappeared." + +"There," cried M. Plantat, "that is indisputable proof that your +supposition about the slippers and handkerchief was right." + +"I think that the facts are sufficiently established to enable us +to go forward. Let's now consider the events which must have +decided--" + +M. Lecoq again stopped, and seemed to be listening. All of a sudden, +without a word he jumped on the window-sill and from thence into the +garden, with the bound of a cat which pounces on a mouse. The noise +of a fall, a stifled cry, an oath, were heard, and then a stamping as +if a struggle were going on. The doctor and M. Plantat hastened to +the window. Day was breaking, the trees shivered in the fresh wind +of the early morning,--objects were vaguely visible without distinct +forms across the white mist which hangs, on summer nights, over the +valley of the Seine. In the middle of the lawn, at rapid intervals, +they heard the blunt noise of a clinched fist striking a living body, +and saw two men, or rather two phantoms, furiously swinging their +arms. Presently the two shapes formed but one, then they separated, +again to unite; one of the two fell, rose at once, and fell again. + +"Don't disturb yourselves," cried M. Lecoq's voice. "I've got the +rogue." + +The shadow of the detective, which was upright, bent over, and the +conflict was recommenced. The shadow stretched on the ground +defended itself with the dangerous strength of despair; his body +formed a large brown spot in the middle of the lawn, and his legs, +kicking furiously, convulsively stretched and contracted. Then +there was a moment when the lookers-on could not make out which was +the detective. They rose again and struggled; suddenly a cry of pain +escaped, with a ferocious oath. + +"Ah, wretch!" + +And almost immediately a loud shout rent the air, and the detective's +mocking tones were heard: + +"There he is! I've persuaded him to pay his respects to us--light +me up a little." + +The doctor and his host hastened to the lamp; their zeal caused a +delay, and at the moment that the doctor raised the lamp, the door +was rudely pushed open. + +"I beg to present to you," said M. Lecoq, "Master Robelot, +bone-setter of Orcival, herborist by prudence, and poisoner by +vocation." + +The stupefaction of the others was such that neither could speak. + +It was really the bone-setter, working his jaws nervously. His +adversary had thrown him down by the famous knee-stroke which is +the last resort of the worst prowlers about the Parisian barriers. +But it was not so much Robelot's presence which surprised M. Plantat +and his friend. Their stupor was caused by the detective's +appearance; who, with his wrist of steel--as rigid as handcuffs-- +held the doctor's ex-assistant, and pushed him forward. The voice +was certainly Lecoq's; there was his costume, his big-knotted +cravat, his yellow-haired watch-chain--still it was no longer Lecoq. +He was blond, with highly cultivated whiskers, when he jumped out +the window; he returned, brown, with a smooth face. The man who +had jumped out was a middle-aged person, with an expressive face +which was in turn idiotic and intelligent; the man who returned by +the door was a fine young fellow of thirty-five, with a beaming eye +and a sensitive lip; a splendid head of curly black hair, brought +out vividly the pallor of his complexion, and the firm outline of +his head and face. A wound appeared on his neck, just below the +chin. + +"Monsieur Lecoq!" cried M. Plantat, recovering his voice. + +"Himself," answered the detective, "and this time the true Lecoq." +Turning to Robelot, he slapped him on the shoulder and added: + +"Go on, you." + +Robelot fell upon a sofa, but the detective continued to hold him +fast. + +"Yes," he continued, "this rascal has robbed me of my blond locks. +Thanks to him and in spite of myself, you see me as I am, with the +head the Creator gave me, and which is really my own." He gave a +careless gesture, half angry, half good-humored. "I am the true +Lecoq; and to tell the truth, only three persons besides yourselves +really know him--two trusted friends, and one who is infinitely +less so--she of whom I spoke a while ago." + +The eyes of the other two met as if to question each other, and M. +Lecoq continued: + +"What can a fellow do? All is not rose color in my trade. We run +such dangers, in protecting society, as should entitle us to the +esteem, if not the affection of our fellow-men: Why, I am condemned +to death, at this moment, by seven of the most dangerous criminals +in France. I have caught them, you see, and they have sworn--they +are men of their word, too--that I should only die by their hands. +Where are these wretches? Four at Cayenne, one at Brest; I've had +news of them. But the other two? I've lost their track. Who knows +whether one of them hasn't followed me here, and whether to-morrow, +at the turning of some obscure road, I shall not get six inches of +cold steel in my stomach?" + +He smiled sadly. + +"And no reward," pursued he, "for the perils which we brave. If I +should fall to-morrow, they would take up my body, carry it to my +house, and that would be the end." The detective's tone had become +bitter, the irritation of his voice betrayed his rancor. "My +precautions happily are taken. While I am performing my duties, I +suspect everything, and when I am on my guard I fear no one. But +there are days when one is tired of being on his guard, and would +like to be able to turn a street corner without looking for a dagger. +On such days I again become myself; I take off my false beard, throw +down my mask, and my real self emerges from the hundred disguises +which I assume in turn. I have been a detective fifteen years, and +no one at the prefecture knows either my true face or the color of +my hair." + +Master Robelot, ill at ease on his lounge, attempted to move. + +"Ah, look out!" cried M. Lecoq, suddenly changing his tone. "Now +get up here, and tell us what you were about in the garden?" + +"But you are wounded!" exclaimed Plantat, observing stains of blood +on M. Lecoq's shirt. + +"Oh, that's nothing--only a scratch that this fellow gave me with a +big cutlass he had." + +M. Plantat insisted on examining the wound, and was not satisfied +until the doctor declared it to be a very slight one. + +"Come, Master Robelot," said the old man, "what were you doing here?" + +The bone-setter did not reply. + +"Take care," insisted M. Plantat, "your silence will confirm us in +the idea that you came with the worst designs." + +But it was in vain that M. Plantat wasted his persuasive eloquence. +Robelot shut himself up in a ferocious and dogged silence. M. +Gendron, hoping, not without reason, that he might have some influence +over his former assistant, spoke: + +"Answer us; what did you come for?" + +Robelot made an effort; it was painful, with his broken jaw, to speak. + +"I came to rob; I confess it." + +"To rob--what?" + +"I don't know." + +"But you didn't scale a wall and risk the jail without a definite +object?" + +"Well, then, I wanted--" + +He stopped. + +"What? Go on." + +"To get some rare flowers in the conservatory." + +"With your cutlass, hey?" said M. Lecoq. Robelot gave him a +terrible look; the detective continued: + +"You needn't look at me that way--you don't scare me. And don't +talk like a fool, either. If you think we are duller than you, you +are mistaken--I warn you of it." + +"I wanted the flower-pots," stammered the man. + +"Oh, come now," cried M. Lecoq, shrugging his shoulders, "don't +repeat such nonsense. You, a man that buys large estates for cash, +steal flower-pots! Tell that to somebody else. You've been turned +over to-night, my boy, like an old glove. You've let out in spite +of yourself a secret that tormented you furiously, and you came +here to get it back again. You thought that perhaps Monsieur Plantat +had not told it to anybody, and you wanted to prevent him from +speaking again forever." + +Robelot made a sign of protesting. + +"Shut up now," said M. Lecoq. "And your cutlass?" + +While this conversation was going on, M. Plantat reflected. + +"Perhaps," he murmured, "I've spoken too soon." + +"Why so?" asked M. Lecoq. "I wanted a palpable proof for Monsieur +Domini; we'll give him this rascal, and if he isn't satisfied, he's +difficult to please." + +"But what shall we do with him?" + +"Shut him up somewhere in the house; if necessary, I'll tie him up." + +"Here's a dark closet." + +"Is it secure?" + +"There are thick walls on three sides of it, and the fourth is +closed with a double door; no openings, no windows, nothing." + +"Just the place." + +M. Plantat opened the closet, a black-looking hole, damp, narrow, +and full of old books and papers. + +"There," said M. Lecoq to his prisoner, "in here you'll be like a +little king," and he pushed him into the closet. Robelot did not +resist, but he asked for some water and a light. They gave him a +bottle of water and a glass. + +"As for a light," said M. Lecoq, "you may dispense with it. You'll +be playing us some dirty trick." + +M. Plantat, having shut the closet-door, took the detective's hand. + +"Monsieur," said he, earnestly, "you have probably just saved my +life at the peril of your own; I will not thank you. The day will +come, I trust, when I may--" + +The detective interrupted him with a gesture. + +"You know how I constantly expose myself," said he, "once more or +less does not matter much. Besides, it does not always serve a man +to save his life." He was pensive a moment, then added: "You will +thank me after awhile, when I have gained other titles to your +gratitude." + +M. Gendron also cordially shook the detective's hand, saying: + +"Permit me to express my admiration of you. I had no idea what the +resources of such a man as you were. You got here this morning +without information, without details, and by the mere scrutiny of +the scene of the crime, by the sole force of reasoning, have found +the criminal: more, you have proved to us that the criminal could +be no other than he whom you have named." + +M. Lecoq bowed modestly. These praises evidently pleased him greatly. + +"Still," he answered, "I am not yet quite satisfied. The guilt of +the Count de Tremorel is of course abundantly clear to me. But what +motives urged him? How was he led to this terrible impulse to kill +his wife, and make it appear that he, too, had been murdered?" + +"Might we not conclude," remarked the doctor, "that, disgusted with +Madame de Tremorel, he has got rid of her to rejoin another woman, +adored by him to madness?" + +M. Lecoq shook his head. + +"People don't kill their wives for the sole reason that they are +tired of them and love others. They quit their wives, live with +the new loves--that's all. That happens every day, and neither +the law nor public opinion condemns such people with great severity." + +"But it was the wife who had the fortune." + +"That wasn't the case here. I have been posting myself up. M. de +Tremorel had a hundred thousand crowns, the remains of a colossal +fortune saved by his friend Sauvresy; and his wife by the marriage +contract made over a half million to him. A man can live in ease +anywhere on eight hundred thousand francs. Besides, the count was +master of all the funds of the estate. He could sell, buy, realize, +borrow, deposit, and draw funds at will." + +The doctor had nothing to reply. M. Lecoq went on, speaking with +a certain hesitation, while his eyes interrogated M. Plantat. + +"We must find the reasons of this murder, and the motives of the +assassin's terrible resolution--in the past. Some crime so +indissolubly linked the count and countess, that only the death of +one of them could free the other. I suspected this crime the first +thing this morning, and have seen it all the way through; and the +man that we have just shut up in there--Robelot--who wanted to +murder Monsieur Plantat, was either the agent or the accomplice of +this crime." + +The doctor had not been present at the various episodes which, +during the day at Valfeuillu and in the evening at the mayor's, had +established a tacit understanding between Plantat and Lecoq. He +needed all the shrewdness he possessed to fill up the gaps and +understand the hidden meanings of the conversation to which he had +been listening for two hours. M. Lecoq's last words shed a ray of +light upon it all, and the doctor cried, "Sauvresy!" + +"Yes--Sauvresy," answered M. Lecoq. "And the paper which the +murderer hunted for so eagerly, for which he neglected his safety +and risked his life, must contain the certain proof of the crime." + +M. Plantat, despite the most significant looks and the direct +provocation to make an explanation, was silent. He seemed a hundred +leagues off in his thoughts, and his eyes, wandering in space, +seemed to follow forgotten episodes in the mists of the past. M. +Lecoq, after a brief pause, decided to strike a bold blow. + +"What a past that must have been," exclaimed he, "which could drive +a young, rich, happy man like Hector de Tremorel to plan in cool +blood such a crime, to resign himself to disappear after it, to +cease to exist, as it were to lose all at once his personality, his +position, his honor and his name! What a past must be that which +drives a young girl of twenty to suicide!" + +M. Plantat started up, pale, more moved than he had yet appeared. + +"Ah," cried he, in an altered voice, "you don't believe what you say! +Laurence never knew about it, never!" + +The doctor, who was narrowly watching the detective, thought he +saw a faint smile light up his mobile features. The old justice of +the peace went on, now calmly and with dignity, in a somewhat +haughty tone: + +"You didn't need tricks or subterfuge, Monsieur Lecoq, to induce me +to tell what I know. I have evinced enough esteem and confidence in +you to deprive you of the right to arm yourself against me with the +sad secret which you have surprised." + +M. Lecoq, despite his cool-headedness, was disconcerted. + +"Yes," pursued M. Plantat, "your astonishing genius for penetrating +dramas like this has led you to the truth. But you do not know all, +and even now I would hold my tongue, had not the reasons which +compelled me to be silent ceased to exist." + +He opened a secret drawer in an old oaken desk near the fireplace +and took out a large paper package, which he laid on the table. + +"For four years," he resumed, "I have followed, day by day--I might +say, hour by hour--the various phases of the dreadful drama which +ended in blood last night at Valfeuillu. At first, the curiosity +of an old retired attorney prompted me. Later, I hoped to save the +life and honor of one very dear to me. Why did I say nothing of my +discoveries? That, my friends, is the secret of my conscience--it +does not reproach me. Besides, I shut my eyes to the evidence even +up to yesterday; I needed the brutal testimony of this deed!" + +Day had come. The frightened blackbirds flew whistling by. The +pavement resounded with the wooden shoes of the workmen going +fieldward. No noise troubled the sad stillness of the library, +unless it were the rustling of the leaves which M. Plantat was +turning over, or now and then a groan from Robelot. + +"Before commencing," said the old man, "I ought to consider your +weariness; we have been up twenty-four hours--" + +But the others protested that they did not need repose. The fever +of curiosity had chased away their exhaustion. They were at last +to know the key of the mystery. + +"Very well," said their host, "listen to me." + + + + +XII + +The Count Hector de Tremorel, at twenty-six, was the model and +ideal of the polished man of the world, proper to our age; a man +useless alike to himself and to others, harmful even, seeming to +have been placed on earth expressly to play at the expense of all. +Young, noble, elegant, rich by millions, endowed with vigorous +health, this last descendant of a great family squandered most +foolishly and ignobly both his youth and his patrimony. He acquired +by excesses of all kinds a wide and unenviable celebrity. People +talked of his stables, his carriages, his servants, his furniture, +his dogs, his favorite loves. His cast-off horses still took +prizes, and a jade distinguished by his notice was eagerly sought +by the young bloods of the town. Do not think, however, that he +was naturally vicious; he had a warm heart, and even generous +emotions at twenty. Six years of unhealthy pleasures had spoiled +him to the marrow. Foolishly vain, he was ready to do anything to +maintain his notoriety. He had the bold and determined egotism of +one who has never had to think of anyone but himself, and has never +suffered. Intoxicated by the flatteries of the so-called friends +who drew his money from him, he admired himself, mistaking his +brutal cynicism for wit, and his lofty disdain of all morality and +his idiotic scepticism, for character. He was also feeble; he had +caprices, but never a will; feeble as a child, a woman, a girl. +His biography was to be found in the petty journals of the day, +which retailed his sayings--or what he might have said; his +least actions and gestures were reported. + +One night when he was supping at the Cafe-de Paris, he threw all +the plates out the window. It cost him twenty thousand francs. +Bravo! One morning gossiping Paris learned with stupefaction that +he had eloped to Italy with the wife of X---, the banker, a lady +nineteen years married. He fought a duel, and killed his man. The +week after, he was wounded in another. He was a hero! On one +occasion he went to Baden, where he broke the bank. Another time, +after playing sixty hours, he managed to lose one hundred and twenty +thousand francs--won by a Russian prince. + +He was one of those men whom success intoxicates, who long for +applause, but who care not for what they are applauded. Count +Hector was more than ravished by the noise he made in the world. +It seemed to him the acme of honor and glory to have his name or +initials constantly in the columns of the Parisian World. He did +not betray this, however, but said, with charming modesty, after +each new adventure: + +"When will they stop talking about me?" + +On great occasions, he borrowed from Louis XIV the epigram: + +"After me the deluge." + +The deluge came in his lifetime. + +One April morning, his valet, a villainous fellow, drilled and +dressed up by the count--woke him at nine o'clock with this speech: + +"Monsieur, a bailiff is downstairs in the ante-chamber, and has come +to seize your furniture." + +Hector turned on his pillow, yawned, stretched, and replied: + +"Well, tell him to begin operations with the stables and +carriage-house; and then come up and dress me." + +He did not seem disturbed, and the servant retired amazed at his +master's coolness. The count had at least sense enough to know the +state of his finances; and he had foreseen, nay, expected the +bailiff's visit. Three years before, when he had been laid up for +six weeks in consequence of a fall from his horse, he had measured +the depth of the gulf toward which he was hastening. Then, he might +yet have saved himself. But he must have changed his whole course +of life, reformed his household, learned that twenty-one franc +pieces made a napoleon. Fie, never! After mature reflection he had +said to himself that he would go on to the end. When the last hour +came, he would fly to the other end of France, erase his name from +his linen, and blow his brains out in some forest. + +This hour had now come. + +By contracting debts, signing bills, renewing obligations, paying +interests and compound interests, giving commissions by always +borrowing, and never paying, Hector had consumed the princely +heritage--nearly four millions in lands--which he had received +at his father's death. The winter just past had cost him fifty +thousand crowns. He had tried eight days before to borrow a hundred +thousand francs, and had failed. He had been refused, not because +his property was not as much as he owed, but because it was known +that property sold by a bankrupt does not bring its value. + +Thus it was that when the valet came in and said, "The bailiff is +here," he seemed like a spectre commanding suicide. + +Hector took the announcement coolly and said, as he got up: + +"Well, here's an end of it." + +He was very calm, though a little confused. A little confusion is +excusable when a man passes from wealth to beggary. He thought he +would make his last toilet with especial care. Parbleu! The French +nobility goes into battle in court costume! He was ready in less +than an hour. He put on his bejewelled watch-chain; then he put a +pair of little pistols, of the finest quality, in his overcoat +pocket; then he sent the valet away, and opening his desk, he +counted up what funds he had left. Ten thousand and some hundreds +of francs remained. He might with this sum take a journey, prolong +his life two or three months; but he repelled with disdain the +thought of a miserable subterfuge, of a reprieve in disguise. He +imagined that with this money he might make a great show of +generosity, which would be talked of in the world; it would be +chivalrous to breakfast with his inamorata and make her a present +of this money at dessert. During the meal he would be full of +nervous gayety, of cynical humor, and then he would announce his +intention to kill himself. The girl would not fail to narrate the +scene everywhere; she would repeat his last conversation, his last +will and gift; all the cafes would buzz with it at night; the papers +would be full of it. + +This idea strangely excited him, and comforted him at once. He was +going out, when his eyes fell upon the mass of papers in his desk. +Perhaps there was something there which might dim the positiveness +of his resolution. He emptied all the drawers without looking or +choosing, and put all the papers in the fire. He looked with pride +upon this conflagration; there were bills, love letters, business +letters, bonds, patents of nobility, deeds of property. Was it not +his brilliant past which flickered and consumed in the fireplace? + +The bailiff occurred to him, and he hastily descended. He was the +most polite of bailiffs, a man of taste and wit, a friend of artists, +himself a poet at times. He had already seized eight horses in the +stables with all their harness and trappings, and five carriages +with their equipage, in the carriage-house. + +"I'm going on slowly, Count," said he bowing. "Perhaps you wish +to arrest the execution. The sum is large, to be sure, but a man +in your position--" + +"Believe that you are here because it suits me," interrupted Hector, +proudly, "this house doesn't suit me; I shall never enter it again. +So, as you are master, go on." + +And wheeling round on his heel he went off. + +The astonished bailiff proceeded with his work. He went from room +to room, admiring and seizing. He seized cups gained at the races, +collections of pipes and arms, and the library, containing many +sporting-books, superbly bound. + +Meanwhile the Count de Tremorel, who was resolved more than ever on +suicide, ascending the boulevards came to his inamorata's house, +which was near the Madeleine. He had introduced her some six months +before into the demi-monde as Jenny Fancy. Her real name was +Pelagie Taponnet, and although the count did not know it, she was +his valet's sister. She was pretty and lively, with delicate hands +and a tiny foot, superb chestnut hair, white teeth, and great +impertinent black eyes, which were languishing, caressing, or +provoking, at will. She had passed suddenly from the most abject +poverty to a state of extravagant luxury. This brilliant change did +not astonish her as much as you might think. Forty-eight hours +after her removal to her new apartments, she had established order +among the servants; she made them obey a glance or a gesture; and +she made her dress-makers and milliners submit with good grace to +her orders. Jenny soon began to languish, in her fine rooms, for +new excitement; her gorgeous toilets no longer amused her. A woman's +happiness is not complete unless seasoned by the jealousy of rivals. +Jenny's rivals lived in the Faubourg du Temple, near the barrier; +they could not envy her splendor, for they did not know her, and +she was strictly forbidden to associate with and so dazzle them. +As for Tremorel, Jenny submitted to him from necessity. He seemed +to her the most tiresome of men. She thought his friends the +dreariest of beings. Perhaps she perceived beneath their ironically +polite manner, a contempt for her, and understood of how little +consequence she was to these rich people, these high livers, +gamblers, men of the world. Her pleasures comprised an evening with +someone of her own class, card-playing, at which she won, and a +midnight supper. The rest of the time she suffered ennui. She was +wearied to death: A hundred times she was on the point of discarding +Tremorel, abandoning all this luxury, money, servants, and resuming +her old life. Many a time she packed up; her vanity always checked +her at the last moment. + +Hector de Tremorel rang at her door at eleven on the morning in +question. She did not expect him so early, and she was evidently +surprised when he told her he had come to breakfast, and asked her +to hasten the cook, as he was in a great hurry. + +She had never, she thought, seen him so amiable, so gay. All +through breakfast he sparkled, as he promised himself he would, +with spirit and fun. At last, while they were sipping their coffee, +Hector spoke: + +"All this, my dear, is only a preface, intended to prepare you for +a piece of news which will surprise you. I am a ruined man." + +She looked at him with amazement, not seeming to comprehend him. + +"I said--ruined," said he, laughing bitterly, "as ruined as man +can be." + +"Oh, you are making fun of me, joking--" + +"I never spoke so seriously in my life. It seems strange to you, +doesn't it? Yet it's sober truth." + +Jenny's large eyes continued to interrogate him. + +"Why," he continued, with lofty carelessness, "life, you know, is +like a bunch of grapes, which one either eats gradually, piece by +piece, or squeezes into a glass to be tossed off at a gulp. I've +chosen the latter way. My grape was four million francs; they are +drunk up to the dregs. I don't regret them, I've had a jolly life +for my money. But now I can flatter myself that I am as much of a +beggar as any beggar in France. Everything at my house is in the +bailiff's hands--I am without a domicile, without a penny." + +He spoke with increasing animation as the multitude of diverse +thoughts passed each other tumultuously in his brain. And he was +not playing a part. He was speaking in all good faith. + +"But--then--" stammered Jenny. + +"What? Are you free? Just so--" + +She hardly knew whether to rejoice or mourn. + +"Yes," he continued, "I give you back your liberty." + +Jenny made a gesture which Hector misunderstood. + +"Oh! be quiet," he added quickly, "I sha'n't leave you thus; I would +not desert you in a state of need. This furniture is yours, and I +have provided for you besides. Here in my pocket are five hundred +napoleons; it is my all; I have brought it to give to you." + +He passed the money over to her on a plate, laughingly, imitating +the restaurant waiters. She pushed it back with a shudder. + +"Oh, well," said he, "that's a good sign, my dear; very good, very +good. I've always thought and said that you were a good girl--in +fact, too good; you needed correcting." + +She did, indeed, have a good heart; for instead of taking Hector's +bank-notes and turning him out of doors, she tried to comfort and +console him. Since he had confessed to her that he was penniless, +she ceased to hate him, and even commenced to love him. Hector, +homeless, was no longer the dreaded man who paid to be master, the +millionnaire who, by a caprice, had raised her from the gutter. He +was no longer the execrated tyrant. Ruined, he descended from his +pedestal, he became a man like others, to be preferred to others, +as a handsome and gallant youth. Then Jenny mistook the last +artifice of a discarded vanity for a generous impulse of the heart, +and was deeply touched by this splendid last gift. + +"You are not as poor as you say," she said, "for you still have so +large a sum." + +"But, dear child, I have several times given as much for diamonds +which you envied." + +She reflected a moment, then as if an idea had struck her, exclaimed: + +"That's true enough; but I can spend, oh, a great deal less, and +yet be just as happy. Once, before I knew you, when I was young +(she was now nineteen), ten thousand francs seemed to me to be one +of those fabulous sums which were talked about, but which few men +ever saw in one pile, and fewer still held in their hands." + +She tried to slip the money into the count's pocket; but he +prevented it. + +"Come, take it back, keep it--" + +"What shall I do with it?" + +"I don't know, but wouldn't this money bring in more? Couldn't you +speculate on the Bourse, bet at the races, play at Baden, or +something? I've heard of people that are now rich as kings, who +commenced with nothing, and hadn't your talents either. Why don't +you do as they did?" + +She spoke excitedly, as a woman does who is anxious to persuade. +He looked at her, astonished to find her so sensitive, so +disinterested. + +"You will, won't you?" she insisted, "now, won't you?" + +"You are a good girl," said he, charmed with her, "but you must take +this money. I give it to you, don't be worried about anything." + +"But you--have you still any money? What have you?" + +"I have yet--" + +He stopped, searched his pockets, and counted the money in his purse. + +"Faith, here's three hundred and forty francs--more than I need. +I must give some napoleons to your servants before I go." + +"And what for Heaven's sake will become of you?" + +He sat back in his chair, negligently stroked his handsome beard, +and said: + +"I am going to blow my brains out." + +"Oh!" + +Hector thought that she doubted what he said. He took his pistols +out of his pockets, showed them to her, and went on: + +"You see these toys? Well, when I leave you, I shall go somewhere-- +no matter where--put the muzzle to my temple, thus, press the +trigger--and all will be over!" + +She gazed at him, her eyes dilated with terror, pale, breathing +hard and fast. But at the same time, she admired him. She marvelled +at so much courage, at this calm, this careless railing tone. What +superb disdain of life! To exhaust his fortune and then kill +himself, without a cry, a tear, or a regret, seemed to her an act +of heroism unheard of, unexampled. It seemed to her that a new, +unknown, beautiful, radiant man stood before her. She loved him as +she had never loved before! + +"No!" she cried, "no! It shall not be!" + +And rising suddenly, she rushed to him and seized him by the arm. + +"You will not kill yourself, will you? Promise me, swear it to me. +It isn't possible, you would not! I love you--I couldn't bear you +before. Oh, I did not know you, but now--come, we will be happy. +You, who have lived with millions don't know how much ten thousand +francs are--but I know. We can live a long time on that, and very +well, too. Then, if we are obliged to sell the useless things--the +horses, carriages, my diamonds, my green cashmere, we can have three +or four times that sum. Thirty thousand francs--it's a fortune! +Think how many happy days--" + +The Count de Tremorel shook his head, smilingly. He was ravished; +his vanity was flattered by the heat of the passion which beamed +from the poor girl's eyes. How he was beloved! How he would be +regretted! What a hero the world was about to lose! + +"For we will not stay here," Jenny went on, "we will go and conceal +ourselves far from Paris, in a little cottage. Why, on the other +side of Belleville you can get a place surrounded by gardens for +a thousand francs a year. How well off we should be there! You +would never leave me, for I should be jealous--oh, so jealous! +We wouldn't have any servants, and you should see that I know how +to keep house." + +Hector said nothing. + +"While the money lasts," continued Jenny, "we'll laugh away the +days. When it's all gone, if you are still decided, you will kill +yourself--that is, we will kill ourselves together. But not with +a pistol--No! We'll light a pan of charcoal, sleep in one another's +arms, and that will be the end. They say one doesn't suffer that +way at all." + +This idea drew Hector from his torpor, and awoke in him a +recollection which ruffled all his vanity. + +Three or four days before, he had read in a paper the account of +the suicide of a cook, who, in a fit of love and despair, had +bravely suffocated himself in his garret. Before dying he had +written a most touching letter to his faithless love. The idea of +killing himself like a cook made him shudder. He saw the +possibility of the horrible comparison. How ridiculous! And +the Count de Tremorel had a wholesome fear of ridicule. To +suffocate himself, at Belleville, with a grisette, how dreadful! +He almost rudely pushed Jenny's arms away, and repulsed her. + +"Enough of that sort of thing," said he, in his careless tone. +"What you say, child, is all very pretty, but utterly absurd. A +man of my name dies, and doesn't choke." And taking the bank-notes +from his pocket, where Jenny had slipped them, he threw them on the +table. + +"Now, good-by." + +He would have gone, but Jenny, red and with glistening eyes, barred +the door with her body. + +"You shall not go!" she cried, "I won't have you; you are mine--for +I love you; if you take one step, I will scream." + +The count shrugged his shoulders. + +"But we must end all this!" + +"You sha'n't go!" + +"Well, then, I'll blow my brains out here." And taking out one of +his pistols, he held it to his forehead, adding, "If you call out +and don't let me pass, I shall fire." He meant the threat for +earnest. + +But Jenny did not call out; she could not; she uttered a deep groan +and fainted. + +"At last!" muttered Hector, replacing the pistol in his pocket. + +He went out, not taking time to lift her from the floor where she +had fallen, and shut the door. Then he called the servants into +the vestibule, gave them ten napoleons to divide among them, and +hastened away. + + + + +XIII + +The Count de Tremorel, having reached the street, ascended the +boulevard. All of a sudden he bethought him of his friends. The +story of the execution must have already spread. + +"No; not that way," he muttered. + +This was because, on the boulevard, he would certainly meet some +of his very dear cronies, and he desired to escape their condolence +and offers of service. He pictured to himself their sorry visages, +concealing a hidden and delicious satisfaction. He had wounded so +many vanities that he must look for terrible revenges. The friends +of an insolently prosperous man are rejoiced in his downfall. + +Hector crossed the street, went along the Rue Duphot, and reached +the quays. Where was he going? He did not know, and did not even +ask himself. He walked at random, enjoying the physical content +which follows a good meal, happy to find himself still in the land +of the living, in the soft April sunlight. + +The weather was superb, and all Paris was out of doors. There was +a holiday air about the town. The flower-women at the corners of +the bridges had their baskets full of odorous violets. The count +bought a bouquet near the Pont Neuf and stuck it in his button-hole, +and without waiting for his change, passed on. He reached the large +square at the end of the Bourdon boulevard, which is always full of +jugglers and curiosity shows; here the noise, the music, drew him +from his torpor, and brought his thoughts back to his present +situation. + +"I must leave Paris," thought he. + +He crossed toward the Orleans station at a quicker pace. He entered +the waiting-room, and asked what time the train left for Etampes. +Why did he choose Etampes? A train had just gone, and there would +not be another one for two hours. He was much annoyed at this, and +as he could not wait there two hours, he wended his way, to kill +time, toward the Jardin des Plantes. He had not been there for ten +or twelve years--not since, when at school, his teachers had brought +him there to look at the animals. Nothing had changed. There were +the groves and parterres, the lawns and lanes, the beasts and birds, +as before. The principal avenue was nearly deserted. He took a +seat opposite the mineralogical museum. He reflected on his +position. He glanced back through the departed years, and did not +find one day among those many days which had left him one of those +gracious memories which delight and console. Millions had slipped +through his prodigal hands, and he could not recall a single useful +expenditure, a really generous one, amounting to twenty francs. He, +who had had so many friends, searched his memory in vain for the +name of a single friend whom he regretted to part from. The past +seemed to him like a faithful mirror; he was surprised, startled at +the folly of the pleasures, the inane delights, which had been the +end and aim of his existence. For what had he lived? For others. + +"Ab, what a fool I was!" he muttered, "what a fool!" + +After living for others, he was going to kill himself for others. +His heart became softened. Who would think of him, eight days +hence? Not one living being. Yes--Jenny, perhaps. Yet, no. +She would be consoled with a new lover in less than a week. + +The bell for closing the garden rang. Night had come, and a thick +and damp mist had covered the city. The count, chilled to the bones, +left his seat. + +"To the station again," muttered he. + +It was a horrible idea to him now--this of shooting himself in the +silence and obscurity of the forest. He pictured to himself his +disfigured body, bleeding, lying on the edge of some ditch. Beggars +or robbers would despoil him. And then? The police would come and +take up this unknown body, and doubtless would carry it, to be +identified, to the Morgue. "Never!" cried he, at this thought, "no, +never!" + +How die, then? He reflected, and it struck him that he would kill +himself in some second-class hotel on the left bank of the Seine. + +"Yes, that's it," said he to himself. + +Leaving the garden with the last of the visitors, he wended his way +toward the Latin Quarter. The carelessness which he had assumed +in the morning gave way to a sad resignation. He was suffering; +his head was heavy, and he was cold. + +"If I shouldn't die to-night," he thought, "I shall have a terrible +cold in the morning." + +This mental sally did not make him smile, but it gave him the +consciousness of being firm and determined. He went into the Rue +Dauphine and looked about for a hotel. Then it occurred to him +that it was not yet seven o'clock, and it might arouse suspicions +if he asked for a room at that early hour. He reflected that he +still had over one hundred francs, and resolved to dine. It should +be his last meal. He went into a restaurant and ordered it. But +he in vain tried to throw off the anxious sadness which filled him. +He drank, and consumed three bottles of wine without changing the +current of his thoughts. + +The waiters were surprised to see him scarcely touch the dishes set +before him, and growing more gloomy after each potation. His dinner +cost ninety francs; he threw his last hundred-franc note on the +table, and went out. As it was not yet late, he went into another +restaurant where some students were drinking, and sat down at a +table in the farther corner of the room. He ordered coffee and +rapidly drank three or four cups. He wished to excite himself, to +screw up his courage to do what he had resolved upon; but he could +not; the drink seemed only to make him more and more irresolute. + +A waiter, seeing him alone at the table, offered him a newspaper. +He took it mechanically, opened it, and read: + +"Just as we are going to press, we learn that a well-known person +has disappeared, after announcing his intention to commit suicide. +The statements made to us are so strange, that we defer details +till to-morrow, not having time to send for fuller information now." + +These lines startled Hector. They were his death sentence, not to +be recalled, signed by the tyrant whose obsequious courtier he had +always been--public opinion. + +"They will never cease talking about me," he muttered angrily. Then +he added, firmly, "Come, I must make an end of this." + +He soon reached the Hotel Luxembourg. He rapped at the door, and was +speedily conducted to the best room in the house. He ordered a fire +to be lighted. He also asked for sugar and water, and writing +materials. At this moment he was as firm as in the morning. + +"I must not hesitate," he muttered, "nor recoil from my fate." + +He sat down at the table near the fireplace, and wrote in a firm +hand a declaration which he destined for the police. + +"No one must be accused of my death," he commenced; and he went on +by asking that the hotel-keeper should be indemnified. + +The hour by the clock was five minutes before eleven; he placed his +pistols on the mantel. + +"I will shoot myself at midnight," thought he. "I have yet an hour +to live." + +The count threw himself in an arm-chair and buried his face in his +hands. Why did he not kill himself at once? Why impose on himself +this hour of waiting, of anguish and torture? He could not have told. +He began again to think over the events of his life, reflecting on +the headlong rapidity of the occurrences which had brought him to +that wretched room. How time had passed! It seemed but yesterday +that he first began to borrow. It does little good, however, to a +man who has fallen to the bottom of the abyss, to know the causes +why he fell. + +The large hand of the clock had passed the half hour after eleven. + +He thought of the newspaper item which he had just read. Who +furnished the information? Doubtless it was Jenny. She had come to +her senses, tearfully hastened after him. When she failed to find +him on the boulevard, she had probably gone to his house, then to +his club, then to some of his friends. So that to-night, at this +very moment, the world was discussing him. + +"Have you heard the news?" + +"Ah, yes, poor Tremorel! What a romance! A good fellow, only--" + +He thought he heard this "only" greeted with laughter and innuendoes. +Time passed on. The ringing vibration of the clock was at hand; the +hour had come. + +The count got up, seized his pistols, and placed himself near the +bed, so as not to fall on the floor. + +The first stroke of twelve; he did not fire. + +Hector was a man of courage; his reputation for bravery was high. +He had fought at least ten duels; and his cool bearing on the ground +had always been admiringly remarked. One day he had killed a man, +and that night he slept very soundly. + +But he did not fire. + +There are two kinds of courage. One, false courage, is that meant +for the public eye, which needs the excitement of the struggle, the +stimulus of rage, and the applause of lookers-on. The other, true +courage, despises public opinion, obeys conscience, not passion; +success does not sway it, it does its work noiselessly. + +Two minutes after twelve--Hector still held the pistol against his +forehead. + +"Am I going to be afraid?" he asked himself. + +He was afraid, but would not confess it to himself. He put his +pistols back on the table and returned to his seat near the fire. +All his limbs were trembling. + +"It's nervousness," he muttered. "It'll pass off." + +He gave himself till one o'clock. He tried to convince himself of +the necessity of committing suicide. If he did not, what would +become of him? How would he live? Must he make up his mind to work? +Besides, could he appear in the world, when all Paris knew of his +intention? This thought goaded him to fury; he had a sudden courage, +and grasped his pistols. But the sensation which the touch of the +cold steel gave him, caused him to drop his arm and draw away +shuddering. + +"I cannot," repeated he, in his anguish. "I cannot!" + +The idea of the physical pain of shooting himself filled him with +horror. Why had he not a gentler death? Poison, or perhaps +charcoal--like the little cook? He did not fear the ludicrousness +of this now; all that he feared was, that the courage to kill +himself would fail him. + +He went on extending his time of grace from half-hour to half-hour. +It was a horrible night, full of the agony of the last night of the +criminal condemned to the scaffold. He wept with grief and rage +and wrung his hands and prayed. Toward daylight he fell exhausted +into an uneasy slumber, in his arm-chair. He was awakened by three +or four heavy raps on the door, which he hastily opened. It was the +waiter, who had come to take his order for breakfast, and who started +back with amazement on seeing Hector, so disordered was his clothing +and so livid the pallor of his features. + +"I want nothing," said the count. "I'm going down." + +He had just enough money left to pay his bill, and six sous for the +waiter. He quitted the hotel where he had suffered so much, without +end or aim in view. He was more resolved than ever to die, only he +yearned for several days of respite to nerve himself for the deed. +But how could he live during these days? He had not so much as a +centime left. An idea struck him--the pawnbrokers! + +He knew that at the Monte-de-Piete* a certain amount would be +advanced to him on his jewelry. But where find a branch office? +He dared not ask, but hunted for one at hazard. He now held his +head up, walked with a firmer step; he was seeking something, and +had a purpose to accomplish. He at last saw the sign of the +Monte-de-Piete on a house in the Rue Conde, and entered. The hall +was small, damp, filthy, and full of people. But if the place was +gloomy, the borrowers seemed to take their misfortunes good-humoredly. +They were mostly students and women, talking gayly as they waited +for their turns. The Count de Tremorel advanced with his watch, +chain, and a brilliant diamond that he had taken from his finger. +He was seized with the timidity of misery, and did not know how to +open his business. A young woman pitied his embarrassment. + + +[* The public pawnbroker establishment of Paris, which has +branch bureaus through the city.] + + +"See," said she, "put your articles on this counter, before that +window with green curtains." + +A moment after he heard a voice which seemed to proceed from the +next room: + +"Twelve hundred francs for the watch and ring." + +This large amount produced such a sensation as to arrest all the +conversation. All eyes were turned toward the millionnaire who was +going to pocket such a fortune. The millionnaire made no response. + +The same woman who had spoken before nudged his arm. + +"That's for you," said she. "Answer whether you will take it or +not." + +"I'll take it," cried Hector. + +He was filled with a joy which made him forget the night's torture. +Twelve hundred francs! How many days it would last! Had he not +heard there were clerks who hardly got that in a year? + +Hector waited a long time, when one of the clerks, who was writing +at a desk, called out: + +"Whose are the twelve hundred francs?" + +The count stepped forward. + +"Mine," said he. + +"Your name?" + +Hector hesitated. He would never give his name aloud in such a +place as this. He gave the first name that occurred to him. + +"Durand." + +"Where are your papers?" + +"What papers?" + +"A passport, a receipt for lodgings, a license to hunt--" + +"I haven't any." + +"Go for them, or bring two well-known witnesses." + +"But--" + +"There is no 'but.' The next--" + +Hector was provoked by the clerk's abrupt manner. + +"Well, then," said he, "give me back the jewelry." + +The clerk looked at him jeeringly. + +"Can't be done. No goods that are registered, can be returned +without proof of rightful possession." So saying, he went on with +his work. "One French shawl, thirty-five francs, whose is it?" + +Hector meanwhile went out of the establishment. He had never +suffered so much, had never imagined that one could suffer so much. +After this ray of hope, so abruptly put out, the clouds lowered +over him thicker and more hopelessly. He was worse off than the +shipwrecked sailor; the pawnbroker had taken his last resources. +All the romance with which he had invested the idea of his suicide +now vanished, leaving bare the stern and ignoble reality. He must +kill himself, not like the gay gamester who voluntarily leaves upon +the roulette table the remains of his fortune, but like the Greek, +who surprised and hunted, knows that every door will be shut upon +him. His death would not be voluntary; he could neither hesitate +nor choose the fatal hour; he must kill himself because he had not +the means of living one day longer. + +And life never before seemed to him so sweet a thing as now. He +never felt so keenly the exuberance of his youth and strength. He +suddenly discovered all about him a crowd of pleasures each more +enviable than the others, which he had never tasted. He who +flattered himself that he had squeezed life to press out its +pleasures, had not really lived. He had had all that is to be +bought or sold, nothing of what is given or achieved. He already +not only regretted giving the ten thousand francs to Jenny, but the +two hundred francs to the servants--nay the six sous given to the +waiter at the restaurant, even the money he had spent on the bunch +of violets. The bouquet still hung in his buttonhole, faded and +shrivelled. What good did it do him? While the sous which he had +paid for it--! He did not think of his wasted millions, but could +not drive away the thought of that wasted franc! + +True, he might, if he chose, find plenty of money still, and easily. +He had only to return quietly to his house, to discharge the bailiffs, +and to resume the possession of his remaining effects. But he would +thus confront the world, and confess his terrors to have overcome +him at the last moment; he would have to suffer glances more cruel +than the pistol-ball. The world must not be deceived; when a man +announces that he is going to kill himself--he must kill himself. + +So Hector was going to die because he had said he would, because +the newspapers had announced the fact. He confessed this to himself +as he went along, and bitterly reproached himself. + +He remembered a pretty spot in Viroflay forest, where he had once +fought a duel; he would commit the deed there. He hastened toward +it. The weather was fine and he met many groups of young people +going into the country for a good time. Workmen were drinking and +clinking their glasses under the trees along the river-bank. All +seemed happy and contented, and their gayety seemed to insult +Hector's wretchedness. He left the main road at the Sevres bridge, +and descending the embankment reached the borders of the Seine. +Kneeling down, he took up some water in the palm of his hand, and +drank--an invincible lassitude crept over him. He sat, or rather +fell, upon the sward. The fever of despair came, and death now +seemed to him a refuge, which he could almost welcome with joy. +Some feet above him the windows of a Sevres restaurant opened toward +the river. He could be seen from them, as well as from the bridge; +but he did not mind this, nor anything else. + +"As well here, as elsewhere," he said to himself. + +He had just drawn his pistol out, when he heard someone call: + +"Hector! Hector!" + +He jumped up at a bound, concealed the pistol, and looked about. +A man was running down the embankment toward him with outstretched +arms. This was a man of his own age, rather stout, but well shaped, +with a fine open face and, large black eyes in which one read +frankness and good-nature; one of those men who are sympathetic at +first sight, whom one loves on a week's acquaintance. + +Hector recognized him. It was his oldest friend, a college mate; +they had once been very intimate, but the count not finding the +other fast enough for him, had little by little dropped his intimacy, +and had now lost sight of him for two years. + +"Sauvresy!" he exclaimed, stupefied. + +"Yes," said the young man, hot, and out of breath, "I've been watching +you the last two minutes; what were you doing here?" + +"Why--nothing." + +"How! What they told me at your house this morning was true, then! +I went there." + +"What did they say?" + +"That nobody knew what had become of you, and that you declated to +Jenny when you left her the night before that you were going to blow +your brains out. The papers have already announced your death, with +details." + +This news seemed to have a great effect on the count. + +"You see, then," he answered tragically, "that I must kill myself!" + +"Why? In order to save the papers from the inconvenience of +correcting their error." + +"People will say that I shrunk--" + +"Oh, 'pon my word now! According to you, a man must make a fool +of himself because it has been reported that he would do it. +Absurd, old fellow. What do you want to kill yourself for?" + +Hector reflected; he almost saw the possibility of living. + +"I am ruined," answered he, sadly. + +"And it's for this that--stop, my friend, let me tell you, you +are an ass! Ruined! It's a misfortune, but when a man is of your +age he rebuilds his fortune. Besides, you aren't as ruined as you +say, because I've got an income of a hundred thousand francs." + +"A hundred thousand francs--" + +"Well, my fortune is in land, which brings in about four per cent." + +Tremorel knew that his friend was rich, but not that he was as rich +as this. He answered with a tinge of envy in his tone: + +"Well, I had more than that; but I had no breakfast this morning." + +"And you did not tell me! But true, you are in a pitiable state; +come along, quick!" + +And he led him toward the restaurant. + +Tremorel reluctantly followed this friend, who had just saved his +life. He was conscious of having been surprised in a distressingly +ridiculous situation. If a man who is resolved to blow his brains +out is accosted, he presses the trigger, he doesn't conceal his +pistol. There was one alone, among all his friends, who loved him +enough not to see the ludicrousness of his position; one alone +generous enough not to torture him with raillery; it was Sauvresy. + +But once seated before a well-filled table, Hector could not +preserve his rigidity. He felt the joyous expansion of spirit +which follows assured safety after terrible peril. He was himself, +young again, once more strong. He told Sauvresy everything; his +vain boasting, his terror at the last moment, his agony at the +hotel, his fury, remorse, and anguish at the pawnbroker's. + +"Ah!" said he. "You have saved me! You are my friend, my only +friend, my brother." + +They talked for more than two hours. + +"Come," said Sauvresy at last, "let us arrange our plans. You want +to disappear awhile; I see that. But to-night you must write four +lines to the papers. To-morrow I propose to take your affairs in +hand, that's a thing I know how to do. I don't know exactly how +you stand; but I will agree to save something from the wreck. We've +got money, you see; your creditors will be easy with us." + +"But where shall I go?" asked Hector, whom the mere idea of +isolation terrified. + +"What? You'll come home with me, parbleu, to Valfeuillu. Don't +you know that I am married? Ah, my friend, a happier man than I +does not exist! I've married--for love--the loveliest and best +of women. You will be a brother to us. But come, my carriage is +right here near the door." + + + + +XIV + +M. Plantat stopped. His companions had not suffered a gesture or +a word to interrupt him. M. Lecoq, as he listened, reflected. He +asked himself where M. Plantat could have got all these minute +details. Who had written Tremorel's terrible biography? As he +glanced at the papers from which Plantat read, he saw that they +were not all in the same handwriting. + +The old justice of the peace pursued the story: + +Bertha Lechaillu, though by an unhoped-for piece of good fortune +she had become Madame Sauvresy, did not love her husband. She was +the daughter of a poor country school-master, whose highest ambition +had been to be an assistant teacher in a Versailles school; yet she +was not now satisfied. Absolute queen of one of the finest domains +in the land, surrounded by every luxury, spending as she pleased, +beloved, adored, she was not content. Her life, so well regulated, +so constantly smooth, without annoyances and disturbance, seemed to +her insipid. There were always the same monotonous pleasures, +always recurring each in its season. There were parties and +receptions, horse rides, hunts, drives--and it was always thus! +Alas, this was not the life she had dreamed of; she was born for +more exciting pleasures. She yearned for unknown emotions and +sensations, the unforeseen, abrupt transitions, passions, adventures. +She had not liked Sauvresy from the first day she saw him, and her +secret aversion to him increased in proportion as her influence over +him grew more certain. She thought him common, vulgar, ridiculous. +She thought the simplicity of his manners, silliness. She looked +at him, and saw nothing in him to admire. She did not listen to +him when he spoke, having already decided in her wisdom that he +could say nothing that was not tedious or commonplace. She was angry +that he had not been a wild young man, the terror of his family. + +He had, however, done as other young men do. He had gone to Paris +and tried the sort of life which his friend Tremorel led. He had +enough of it in six months, and hastily returned to Valfeuillu, to +rest after such laborious pleasures. The experience cost him a +hundred thousand francs, but he said he did not regret purchasing +it at this price. + +Bertha was wearied with the constancy and adoration of her husband. +She had only to express a desire to be at once obeyed, and this +blind submission to all her wishes appeared to her servile in a man. +A man is born, she thought, to command, and not to obey; to be +master, and not slave. She would have preferred a husband who +would come in in the middle of the night, still warm from his orgy, +having lost at play, and who would strike her if she upbraided him. +A tyrant, but a man. Some months after her marriage she suddenly +took it into her head to have absurd freaks and extravagant caprices. +She wished to prove him, and see how far his constant complacence +would go. She thought she would tire him out. It was intolerable +to feel absolutely sure of her husband, to know that she so filled +his heart that he had room for no other, to have nothing to fear, +not even the caprice of an hour. Perhaps there was yet more than +this in Bertha's aversion. She knew herself, and confessed to +herself that had Sauvresy wished, she would have been his without +being his wife. She was so lonely at her father's, so wretched in +her poverty, that she would have fled from her home, even for this. +And she despised her husband because he had not despised her enough! + +People were always telling her that she was the happiest of women. +Happy! And there were days when she wept when she thought that she +was married. Happy! There were times when she longed to fly, to +seek adventure and pleasure, all that she yearned for, what she had +not had and never would have. The fear of poverty--which she knew +well--restrained her. This fear was caused in part by a wise +precaution which her father, recently dead, had taken. Sauvresy +wished to insert in the marriage-contract a settlement of five +hundred thousand francs on his affianced. The worthy Lechailin had +opposed this generous act. + +"My daughter," he said, "brings you nothing. Settle forty thousand +francs on her if you will, not a sou more; otherwise there shall be +no marriage." + +As Sauvresy insisted, the old man added: + +"I hope that she will be a good and worthy wife; if so, your fortune +will be hers. But if she is not, forty thousand francs will be none +too little for her. Of course, if you are afraid that you will die +first, you can make a will." + +Sauvresy was forced to yield. Perhaps the worthy school-master +knew his daughter; if so he was the only one. Never did so +consummate a hypocrisy minister to so profound a perversity, and a +depravity so inconceivable in a young and seemingly innocent girl. +If, at the bottom of her heart, she thought herself the most +wretched of women, there was nothing of it apparent--it was a +well-kept secret. She knew how to show to her husband, in place +of the love she did not feel, the appearance of a passion at once +burning and modest, betraying furtive glances and a flush as of +pleasure, when he entered the room. + +All the world said: + +"Bertha is foolishly fond of her husband." + +Sauvresy was sure of it, and he was the first to say, not caring +to conceal his joy: + +"My wife adores me." + +Such were man and wife at Valfeuillu when Sauvresy found Tremorel +on the banks of the Seine with a pistol in his hand. Sauvresy +missed his dinner that evening for the first time since his marriage, +though he had promised to be prompt, and the meal was kept waiting +for him. Bertha might have been anxious about this delay; she was +only indignant at what she called inconsiderateness. She was asking +herself how she should punish her husband, when, at ten o'clock at +night, the drawing-room door was abruptly thrown open, and Sauvresy +stood smiling upon the threshold. + +"Bertha," said he, "I've brought you an apparition." + +She scarcely deigned to raise her head. Sauvresy continued: + +"An apparition whom you know, of whom I have often spoken to you, +whom you will like because I love him, and because he is my oldest +comrade, my best friend." + +And standing aside, he gently pushed Hector into the room. + +"Madame Sauvresy, permit me to present to you Monsieur the Count +de Tremorel." + +Bertha rose suddenly, blushing, confused, agitated by an indefinable +emotion, as if she saw in reality an apparition. For the first time +in her life she was abashed, and did not dare to raise her large, +clear blue eyes. + +"Monsieur," she stammered, "you are welcome." + +She knew Tremorel's name well. Sauvresy had often mentioned it, +and she had seen it often in the papers, and had heard it in the +drawing-rooms of all her friends. He who bore it seemed to her, +after what she had heard a great personage. He was, according to +his reputation, a hero of another age, a social Don Quixote, a +terribly fast man of the world. He was one of those men whose lives +astonish common people, whom the well-to-do citizen thinks faithless +and lawless, whose extravagant passions overleap the narrow bounds +of social prejudice; a man who tyrannizes over others, whom all fear, +who fights on the slightest provocation, who scatters gold with a +prodigal hand, whose iron health resists the most terrible excesses. +She had often in her miserable reveries tried to imagine what kind +of man this Count de Tremorel was. She awarded him with such +qualities as she desired for her fancied hero, with whom she could +fly from her husband in search of new adventures. And now, of a +sudden, he appeared before her. + +"Give Hector your hand, dear," said Sauvresy. She held out her +hand, which Tremorel lightly pressed, and his touch seemed to give +her an electric shock. + +Sauvresy threw himself into an arm-chair. + +"You see, Bertha," said he, "our friend Hector is exhausted with +the life he has been leading. He has been advised to rest, and +has come to seek it here, with us." + +"But, dear," responded Bertha, "aren't you afraid that the count +will be bored a little here?" + +"Why?" + +"Valfeuillu is very quiet, and we are but dull country folks." + +Bertha talked for the sake of talking, to break a silence which +embarrassed her, to make Tremorel speak, and hear his voice. As +she talked she observed him, and studied the impression she made +on him. Her radiant beauty usually struck those who saw her for +the first time with open admiration. He remained impassible. She +recognized the worn-out rake of title, the fast man who has tried, +experienced, exhausted all things, in his coldness and superb +indifference. And because he did not admire her she admired him +the more. + +"What a difference," thought she, "between him and that vulgar +Sauvresy, who is surprised at everything, whose face shows all +that he thinks, whose eye betrays what he is going to say before +he opens his mouth." + +Bertha was mistaken. Hector was not as cold and indifferent as she +imagined. He was simply wearied, utterly exhausted. He could +scarcely sit up after the terrible excitements of the last +twenty-four hours. He soon asked permission to retire. Sauvresy, +when left alone with his wife, told her all that happened, and the +events which resulted in Tremorel's coming to Valfeuillu; but like +a true friend omitted everything that would cast ridicule upon his +old comrade. + +"He's a big child," said he, "a foolish fellow, whose brain is weak +but we'll take care of him and cure him." + +Bertha never listened to her husband so attentively before. She +seemed to agree with him, but she really admired Tremorel. Like +Jenny, she was struck with the heroism which could squander a +fortune and then commit suicide. + +"Ah!" sighed she, "Sauvresy would not have done it!" + +No, Sauvresy was quite a different man from the Count de Tremorel. +The next day he declared his intention to adjust his friend's +affairs. Hector had slept well, having spent the night on an +excellent bed, undisturbed by pressing anxieties; and he appeared +in the morning sleek and well-dressed, the disorder and desperation +of the previous evening having quite disappeared. He had a nature +not deeply impressible by events; twenty-four hours consoled him +for the worst catastrophes, and he soon forgot the severest lessons +of life. If Sauvresy had bid him begone, he would not have known +where to go; yet he had already resumed the haughty carelessness of +the millionnaire, accustomed to bend men and circumstances to his +will. He was once more calm and cold, coolly joking, as if years +had passed since that night at the hotel, and as if all the disasters +to his fortune had been repaired. Bertha was amazed at this +tranquillity after such great reverses, and thought this childish +recklessness force of character. + +"Now," said Sauvresy, "as I've become your man of business, give me +my instructions, and some valuable hints. What is, or was, the +amount of your fortune?" + +"I haven't the least idea." + +Sauvresy provided himself with a pencil and a large sheet of paper, +ready to set down the figures. He seemed a little surprised. + +"All right," said he, "we'll put x down as the unknown quantity of +the assets: now for the liabilities." + +Hector made a superbly disdainful gesture. + +"Don't know, I'm sure, what they are." + +"What, can't you give a rough guess?" + +"Oh, perhaps. For instance, I owe between five and six hundred +thousand francs to Clair & Co., five hundred thousand to Dervoy; +about as much to Dubois, of Orleans--" + +"Well?" + +"I can't remember any more." + +"But you must have a memorandum of your loans somewhere?" + +"No." + +"You have at least kept your bonds, bills, and the sums of your +various debts?" + +"None of them. I burnt up all my papers yesterday." + +Sauvresy jumped up from his chair in astonishment; such a method +of doing business seemed to him monstrous; he could not suppose +that Hector was lying. Yet he was lying, and this affectation of +ignorance was a conceit of the aristocratic man of the world. It +was very noble, very distingue, to ruin one's self without knowing +how! + +"But, my dear fellow," cried Sauvresy, "how can we clear up your +affairs?" + +"Oh, don't clear them up at all; do as I do--let the creditors act +as they please, they will know how to settle it all, rest assured; +let them sell out my property." + +"Never! Then you would be ruined, indeed!" + +"Well, it's only a little more or a little less." + +"What splendid disinterestedness!" thought Bertha; "what coolness, +what admirable contempt of money, what noble disdain of the petty +details which annoy common people! Was Sauvresy capable of all +this?" + +She could not at least accuse him of avarice, since for her he was +as prodigal as a thief; he had never refused her anything; he +anticipated her most extravagant fancies. Still he had a strong +appetite for gain, and despite his large fortune, he retained the +hereditary respect for money. When he had business with one of his +farmers, he would rise very early, mount his horse, though it were +mid-winter, and go several leagues in the snow to get a hundred +crowns. He would have ruined himself for her if she had willed it, +this she was convinced of; but he would have ruined himself +economically, in an orderly way. + +Sauvresy reflected. + +"You are right," said he to Hector, "your creditors ought to know +your exact position. Who knows that they are not acting in concert? +Their simultaneous refusal to lend you a hundred thousand makes me +suspect it. I will go and see them." + +"Clair & Co., from whom I received my first loans, ought to be the +best informed." + +"Well, I will see Clair & Co. But look here, do you know what you +would do if you were reasonable?" + +"What?" + +"You would go to Paris with me, and both of us--" + +Hector turned very pale, and his eyes shone. + +"Never!" he interrupted, violently, "never!" + +His "dear friends" still terrified him. What! Reappear on the +theatre of his glory, now that he was fallen, ruined, ridiculous by +his unsuccessful suicide? Sauvresy had held out his arms to him. +Sauvresy was a noble fellow, and loved Hector sufficiently not to +perceive the falseness of his position, and not to judge him a +coward because he shrank from suicide. But the others!-- + +"Don't talk to me about Paris," said he in a calmer tone. "I shall +never set my foot in it again." + +"All right--so much the better; stay with us; I sha'n't complain of +it, nor my wife either. Some fine day we'll find you a pretty +heiress in the neighborhood. But," added Sauvresy, consulting his +watch, "I must go if I don't want to lose the train." + +"I'll go to the station with you," said Tremorel. + +This was not solely from a friendly impulse. He wanted to ask +Sauvresy to look after the articles left at the pawnbroker's in the +Rue de Condo, and to call on Jenny. Bertha, from her window, +followed with her eyes the two friends; who, with arms interlocked, +ascended the road toward Orcival. "What a difference," thought she, +"between these two men! My husband said he wished to be his friend's +steward; truly he has the air of a steward. What a noble gait the +count has, what youthful ease, what real distinction! And yet I'm +sure that my husband despises him, because he has ruined himself by +dissipation. He affected--I saw it--an air of protection. Poor +youth! But everything about the count betrays an innate or acquired +superiority; even his name, Hector--how it sounds!" And she +repeated "Hector" several times, as if it pleased her, adding, +contemptuously, "My husband's name is Clement!" + +M. de Tremorel returned alone from the station, as gayly as a +convalescent taking his first airing. As soon as Bertha saw him +she left the window. She wished to remain alone, to reflect upon +this event which had happened so suddenly, to analyze her +sensations, listen to her presentiments, study her impressions and +decide, if possible, upon her line of conduct. She only reappeared +when the tea was set for her husband, who returned at eleven in the +evening. Sauvresy was faint from hunger, thirst, and fatigue, but +his face glowed with satisfaction. + +"Victory!" exclaimed he, as he ate his soup. "We'll snatch you +from the hands of the Philistines yet. Parbleu! The finest +feathers of your plumage will remain, after all, and you will be +able to save enough for a good cosey nest." + +Bertha glanced at her husband. + +"How is that?" said she. + +"It's very simple. At the very first, I guessed the game of our +friend's creditors. They reckoned on getting a sale of his effects; +would have bought them in a lump dirt cheap, as it always happens, +and then sold them in detail, dividing the profits of the operation." + +"And can you prevent that?" asked Tremorel, incredulously. + +"Certainly. Ah, I've completely checkmated these gentlemen. I've +succeeded by chance--I had the good luck to get them all together +this evening. I said to them, you'll let us sell this property as +we please, voluntarily, or I'll outbid you all, and spoil your cards. +They looked at me in amazement. My notary, who was with me, remarked +that I was Monsieur Sauvresy, worth two millions. Our gentlemen +opened their eyes very wide, and consented to grant my request." + +Hector, notwithstanding what he had said, knew enough about his +affairs to see that this action would save him a fortune--a small +one, as compared with what he had possessed, yet a fortune. + +The certainty of this delighted him, and moved by a momentary and +sincere gratitude, he grasped both of Sauvresy's hands in his. + +"Ah, my friend," cried he, "you give me my honor, after saving my +life! How can I ever repay you?" + +"By committing no imprudences or foolishnesses, except reasonable +ones. Such as this," added Sauvresy, leaning toward Bertha and +embracing her. + +"And there is nothing more to fear?" + +"Nothing! Why I could have borrowed the two millions in an hour, +and they knew it. But that's not all. The search for you is +suspended. I went to your house, took the responsibility of sending +away all your servants except your valet and a groom. If you agree, +we'll send the horses to be sold to-morrow, and they'll fetch a +good price; your own saddle-horse shall be brought here." + +These details annoyed Bertha. She thought her husband exaggerated +his services, carrying them even to servility. + +"Really," thought she, "he was born to be a steward." + +"Do you know what else I did?" pursued Sauvresy. "Thinking that +perhaps you were in want of a wardrobe, I had three or four trunks +filled with your clothes, sent them out by rail, and one of the +servants has just gone after them." + +Hector, too, began to find Sauvresy's services excessive, and thought +he treated him too much like a child who could foresee nothing. The +idea of having it said before a woman that he was in want of clothes +irritated him. He forgot that he had found it a very simple thing +in the morning to ask his friend for some linen. + +Just then a noise was heard in the vestibule. Doubtless the trunks +had come. Bertha went out to give the necessary orders. + +"Quick!" cried Sauvresy. "Now that we are alone, here are your +trinkets. I had some trouble in getting them. They are suspicious +at the pawnbroker's. I think they began to suspect that I was one +of a band of thieves." + +"You didn't mention my name, did you?" + +"That would have been useless. My notary was with me, fortunately. +One never knows how useful one's notary may be. Don't you think +society is unjust toward notaries?" + +Tremorel thought his friend talked very lightly about a serious +matter, and this flippancy vexed him. + +"To finish up, I paid a visit to Miss Jenny. She has been abed +since last evening, and her chambermaid told me she had not ceased +sobbing bitterly ever since your departure." + +"Had she seen no one?" + +"Nobody at all. She really thought you dead, and when I told her +you were here with me, alive and well, I thought she would go mad +for joy. Do you know, Hector, she's really pretty." + +"Yes--not bad." + +"And a very good little body, I imagine. She told me some very +touching things. I would wager, my friend, that she don't care so +much for your money as she does for yourself." + +Hector smiled superciliously. + +"In short, she was anxious to follow me, to see and speak to you. +I had to swear with terrible oaths that she should see you +to-morrow, before she would let me go; not at Paris, as you said +you would never go there, but at Corbeil." + +"Ah, as for that--" + +"She will be at the station to-morrow at twelve. We will go down +together, and I will take the train for Paris. You can get into +the Corbeil train, and breakfast with Miss Jenny at the hotel of +the Belle Image." + +Hector began to offer an objection. Sauvresy stopped him with a +gesture. + +"Not a word," said he. "Here is my wife." + + + + +XV + +On going to bed, that night, the count was less enchanted than ever +with the devotion of his friend Sauvresy. There is not a diamond on +which a spot cannot be found with a microscope. + +"Here he is," thought he, "abusing his privileges as the saver of +my life. Can't a man do you a service, without continually making +you feel it? It seems as though because he prevented me from +blowing my brains out, I had somehow become something that belongs +to him! He came very near upbraiding me for Jenny's extravagance. +Where will he stop?" + +The next day at breakfast he feigned indisposition so as not to +eat, and suggested to Sauvresy that he would lose the train. + +Bertha, as on the evening before, crouched at the window to see +them go away. Her troubles during the past eight-and-forty hours +had been so great that she hardly recognized herself. She scarcely +dared to reflect or to descend to the depths of her heart. What +mysterious power did this man possess, to so violently affect her +life? She wished that he would go, never to return, while at the +same time she avowed to herself that in going he would carry with +him all her thoughts. She struggled under the charm, not knowing +whether she ought to rejoice or grieve at the inexpressible emotions +which agitated her, being irritated to submit to an influence +stronger than her own will. + +She decided that to-day she would go down to the drawing-room. He +would not fail--were it only for politeness--to go in there; and +then, she thought, by seeing him nearer, talking with him, knowing +him better, his influence over her would vanish. Doubtless he +would return, and so she watched for him, ready to go down as soon +as she saw him approaching. She waited with feverish shudderings, +anxiously believing that this first tete-a-tete in her husband's +absence would be decisive. Time passed; it was more than two hours +since he had gone out with Sauvresy, and he had not reappeared. +Where could he be? + +At this moment, Hector was awaiting Jenny at the Corbeil station. +The train arrived, and Jenny soon appeared. Her grief, joy, emotion +had not made her forget her toilet, and never had she been so +rollickingly elegant and pretty. She wore a green dress with a +train, a velvet mantle, and the jauntiest little hat in the world. +As soon as she saw Hector standing near the door, she uttered a cry, +pushed the people aside, and rushed into his arms, laughing and +crying at the same time. She spoke quite loud, with wild gestures, +so that everyone could hear what she said. + +"You didn't kill yourself, after all," said she. "Oh, how I have +suffered; but what happiness I feel to-day!" + +Tremorel struggled with her as he could, trying to calm her +enthusiastic exclamations, softly repelling her, charmed and +irritated at once, and exasperated at all these eyes rudely fixed +on him. For none of the passengers had gone out. They were all +there, staring and gazing. Hector and Jenny were surrounded by a +circle of curious folks. + +"Come along," said Hector, his patience exhausted. He drew her out +of the door, hoping to escape this prying curiosity; but he did not +succeed. They were persistently followed. Some of the Corbeil +people who were on the top of the omnibus begged the conductor to +walk his horses, that this singular couple might not be lost to +view, and the horses did not get into a trot until they had +disappeared in the hotel. + +Sauvresy's foresight in recommending the place of meeting had thus +been disconcerted by Jenny's sensational arrival. Questions were +asked; the hostess was adroitly interrogated, and it was soon known +that this person, who waited for eccentric young ladies at the +Corbeil station, was an intimate friend of the owner of Valfeuillu. +Neither Hector nor Jenny doubted that they formed the general topic +of conversation. They breakfasted gayly in the best room at the +Belle Image, during which Tremorel recounted a very pretty story +about his restoration to life, in which he played a part, the +heroism of which was well calculated to redouble the little lady's +admiration. Then Jenny in her turn unfolded her plans for the +future, which were, to do her justice, most reasonable. She had +resolved more than ever to remain faithful to Hector now that he +was ruined, to give up her elegant rooms, sell her furniture, and +undertake some honest trade. She had found one of her old friends, +who was now an accomplished dressmaker, and who was anxious to +obtain a partner who had some money, while she herself furnished +the experience. They would purchase an establishment in the Breda +quarter, and between them could scarcely fail to prosper. Jenny +talked with a pretty, knowing, business-like air, which made Hector +laugh. These projects seemed very comic to him; yet he was touched +by this unselfishness on the part of a young and pretty woman, who +was willing to work in order to please him. + +But, unhappily, they were forced to part. Jenny had gone to Corbeil +intending to stay a week; but the count told her this was absolutely +impossible. She cried bitterly at first, then got angry, and finally +consoled herself with a plan to return on the following Tuesday. + +"Good-by," said she, embracing Hector, "think of me." She smilingly +added, "I ought to be jealous; for they say your friend's wife is +perhaps the handsomest woman in France. Is it true?" + +"Upon my word, I don't know. I've forgotten to look at her." + +Hector told the truth. Although he did not betray it, he was still +under the surprise of his chagrin at the failure of his attempt at +suicide. He felt the dizziness which follows great moral crises as +well as a heavy blow on the head, and which distracts the attention +from exterior things. But Jenny's words, "the handsomest woman in +France," attracted his notice, and he could, that very evening, +repair his forgetfulness. When he returned to Valfeuillu, his +friend had not returned; Mme. Sauvresy was alone reading, in the +brilliantly lighted drawing-room. Hector seated himself opposite +her, a little aside, and was thus able to observe her at his ease, +while engaging her in conversation. His first impression was an +unfavorable one. He found her beauty too sculptural and polished. +He sought for imperfections, and finding none, was almost terrified +by this lovely, motionless face, these clear, cold eyes. Little by +little, however, he accustomed himself to pass the greater part of +the afternoon with Bertha, while Sauvresy was away arranging his +affairs--selling, negotiating, using his time in cutting down +interests and discussing with agents and attorneys. He soon +perceived that she listened to him with pleasure, and he judged +from this that she was a decidedly superior woman, much better than +her husband. He had no wit, but possessed an inexhaustible fund of +anecdotes and adventures. He had seen so many things and known so +many people that he was as interesting as a chronicle. He had a +sort of frothy fervor, not wanting in brilliancy, and a polite +cynicism which, at first, surprised one. Had Bertha been +unimpassioned, she might have judged him at his value; but she had +lost her power of insight. She heard him, plunged in a foolish +ecstasy, as one hears a traveller who has returned from far and +dangerous countries, who has visited peoples of whose language the +hearer is ignorant, and lived in the midst of manners and customs +incomprehensible to ourselves. + +Days, weeks, months passed on, and the Count de Tremorel did not +find life at Valfeuillu as dull as he had thought. He insensibly +slipped along the gentle slope of material well-being, which leads +directly to brutishness. A physical and moral torpor had succeeded +the fever of the first days, free from disagreeable sensations, +though wanting in excitement. He ate and drank much, and slept +twelve round hours. The rest of the time, when he did not talk +with Bertha, he wandered in the park, lounged in a rocking-chair, +or took a jaunt in the saddle. He even went fishing under the +willows at the foot of the garden; and grew fat. His best days +were those which he spent at Corbeil with Jenny. He found in her +something of his past, and she always quarrelled with him, which +woke him up. Besides, she brought him the gossip of Paris and the +small talk of the boulevards. She came regularly every week, and +her love for Hector, far from diminishing, seemed to grow with each +interview. The poor girl's affairs were in a troubled condition. +She had bought her establishment at too high a price, and her +partner at the end of the first month decamped, carrying off three +thousand francs. She knew nothing about the trade which she had +undertaken, and she was robbed without mercy on all sides. She +said nothing of these troubles to Hector, but she intended to ask +him to come to her assistance. It was the least that he could do. + +At first, the visitors to Valfeuillu were somewhat astonished at +the constant presence there of a young man of leisure; but they got +accustomed to him. Hector assumed a melancholy expression of +countenance, such as a man ought to have who had undergone +unheard-of misfortunes, and whose life had failed of its promise. +He appeared inoffensive; people said: + +"The count has a charming simplicity." + +But sometimes, when alone, he had sudden and terrible relapses. +"This life cannot last," thought he; and he was overcome with +childish rage when he contrasted the past with the present. How +could he shake off this dull existence, and rid himself of these +stiffly good people who surrounded him, these friends of Sauvresy? +Where should he take refuge? He was not tempted to return to Paris; +what could he do there? His house had been sold to an old leather +merchant; and he had no money except that which he borrowed of +Sauvresy. Yet Sauvresy, to Hector's mind, was a most uncomfortable, +wearisome, implacable friend; he did not understand half-way +measures in desperate situations. + +"Your boat is foundering," he said to Hector; "let us begin by +throwing all that is superfluous into the sea. Let us keep nothing +of the past; that is dead; we will bury it, and nothing shall recall +it. When your situation is relieved, we will see." + +The settlement of Hector's affairs was very laborious. Creditors +sprung up at every step, on every side, and the list of them seemed +never to be finished. Some had even come from foreign lands. +Several of them had been already paid, but their receipts could not +be found, and they were clamorous. Others, whose demands had been +refused as exorbitant, threatened to go to law, hoping to frighten +Sauvresy into paying. Sauvresy wearied his friend by his incessant +activity. Every two or three days he went to Paris, and he attended +the sales of the property in Burgundy and Orleans. The count at +last detested and hated him; Sauvresy's happy, cheerful air annoyed +him; jealousy stung him. One thought--that a wretched one-- +consoled him a little. "Sauvresy's happiness," said he to himself, +"is owing to his imbecility. He thinks his wife dead in love with +him, whereas she can't bear him." + +Bertha had, indeed, permitted Hector to perceive her aversion to +her husband. She no longer studied the emotions of her heart; she +loved Tremorel, and confessed it to herself. In her eyes he realized +the ideal of her dreams. At the same time she was exasperated to +see in him no signs of love for her. Her beauty was not, then, +irresistible, as she had often been told. He was gallant and +courteous to her--nothing more. + +"If he loved me," thought she, "he would tell me so, for he is +bold with women and fears no one." + +Then she began to hate the girl, her rival, whom Hector went to +meet at Corbeil every week. She wished to see her, to know her. +Who could she be? Was she handsome? Hector had been very reticent +about Jenny. He evaded all questions about her, not sorry to let +Bertha's imagination work on his mysterious visits. + +The day at last came when she could no longer resist the intensity +of her curiosity. She put on the simplest of her toilets, in black, +threw a thick veil over her head, and hastened to the Corbeil station +at the hour that she thought the unknown girl would present herself +there. She took a seat on a bench in the rear of the waiting-room. +She had not long to wait. She soon perceived the count and a young +girl coming along the avenue, which she could see from where she sat. +They were arm in arm, and seemed to be in a very happy mood. They +passed within a few steps of her, and as they walked very slowly, +she was able to scrutinize Jenny at her ease. She saw that she was +pretty, but that was all. Having seen that which she wished, and +become satisfied that Jenny was not to be feared (which showed her +inexperience) Bertha directed her steps homeward. But she chose her +time of departure awkwardly; for as she was passing along behind the +cabs, which concealed her, Hector came out of the station. They +crossed each other's paths at the gate, and their eyes met. Did he +recognize her? His face expressed great surprise, yet he did not +bow to her. "Yes, he recognized me," thought Bertha, as she returned +home by the river-road; and surprised, almost terrified by her +boldness, she asked herself whether she ought to rejoice or mourn +over this meeting. What would be its result? Hector cautiously +followed her at a little distance. He was greatly astonished. His +vanity, always on the watch, had already apprised him of what was +passing in Bertha's heart, but, though modesty was no fault of his, +he was far from guessing that she was so much enamoured of him as +to take such a step. + +"She loves me!" he repeated to himself, as he went along. "She +loves me!" + +He did not yet know what to do. Should he fly? Should he still +appear the same in his conduct toward her, pretending not to have +seen her? He ought to fly that very evening, without hesitation, +without turning his head; to fly as if the house were about to +tumble about his head. This was his first thought. It was quickly +stifled under the explosion of the base passions which fermented in +him. Ah, Sauvresy had saved him when he was dying! Sauvresy, after +saving him, had welcomed him, opened to him his heart, purse, house; +at this very moment he was making untiring efforts to restore his +fortunes. Men like Tremorel can only receive such services as +outrages. Had not his sojourn at Valfeuillu been a continual +suffering? Was not his self-conceit tortured from morning till +night? He might count the days by their humiliations. What! Must +he always submit to--if he was not grateful for--the superiority +of a man whom he had always been wont to treat as his inferior? + +"Besides," thought he, judging his friend by himself, "he only acts +thus from pride and ostentation. What am I at his house, but a +living witness of his generosity and devotion? He seems to live +for me--it's Tremorel here and Tremorel there! He triumphs over +my misfortunes, and makes his conduct a glory and title to the public +admiration." + +He could not forgive his friend for being so rich, so happy, so +highly respected, for having known how to regulate his life, while +he had exhausted his own fortune at thirty. And should he not seize +so good an opportunity to avenge himself for the favors which +overwhelmed him? + +"Have I run after his wife?" said he to himself, trying to impose +silence on his conscience. "She comes to me of her own will, +herself, without the least temptation from me. I should be a fool +if I repelled her." + +Conceit has irresistible arguments. Hector, when he entered the +house, had made up his mind. He did not fly. Yet he had the excuse +neither of passion nor of temptation; he did not love her, and his +infamy was deliberate, coldly premeditated. Between her and him a +chain more solid than mutual attraction was riveted; their common +hatred of Sauvresy. They owed too much to him. His hand had held +both from degradation. + +The first hours of their mutual understanding were spent in angry +words, rather than the cooings of love. They perceived too clearly +the disgrace of their conduct not to try to reassure each other +against their remorse. They tried to prove to each other that +Sauvresy was ridiculous and odious; as if they were absolved by his +deficiencies, if deficiencies he had. If indeed trustfulness is +foolishness, Sauvresy was indeed a fool, because he could be deceived +under his own eyes, in his own house, because he had perfect faith +in his wife and his friend. He suspected nothing, and every day he +rejoiced that he had been able to keep Tremorel by him. He often +repeated to his wife: + +"I am too happy." + +Bertha employed all her art to encourage these joyous illusions. +She who had before been so capricious, so nervous, wilful, became +little by little submissive to the degree of an angelic softness. +The future of her love depended on her husband, and she spared no +pains to prevent the slightest suspicion from ruffling his calm +confidence. Such was their prudence that no one in the house +suspected their state. And yet Bertha was not happy. Her love did +not yield her the joys she had expected. She hoped to be transported +to the clouds, and she remained on the earth, hampered by all the +miserable ties of a life of lies and deceit. + +Perhaps she perceived that she was Hector's revenge on her husband, +and that he only loved in her the dishonored wife of an envied +friend. And to crown all, she was jealous. For several months she +tried to persuade Tremorel to break with Jenny. He always had the +same reply, which, though it might be prudent, was irritating. + +"Jenny is our security--you must think of that." + +The fact was, however, that he was trying to devise some means of +getting rid of Jenny. It was a difficult matter. The poor girl, +having fallen into comparative poverty, became more and more +tenacious of Hector's affection. She often gave him trouble by +telling him that he was no longer the same, that he was changed; +she was sad, and wept, and had red eyes. + +One evening, in a fit of anger, she menaced him with a singular +threat. + +"You love another," she said. "I know it, for I have proofs of it. +Take care! If you ever leave me, my anger will fall on her head, +and I will not have any mercy on her." + +The count foolishly attached no importance to these words; they only +hastened the separation. + +"She is getting very troublesome," thought he. "If some day I +shouldn't go when she was expecting me, she might come up to +Valfeuillu, and make a wretched scandal." + +He armed himself with all his courage, which was assisted by Bertha's +tears and entreaties, and started for Corbeil resolved to break off +with Jenny. He took every precaution in declaring his intentions, +giving the best reasons for his decision that he could think of. + +"We must be careful, you know, Jenny," said he, "and cease to meet +for a while. I am ruined, you know, and the only thing that can +save me is marriage." + +Hector had prepared himself for an explosion of fury, piercing cries, +hysterics, fainting-fits. To his great surprise, Jenny did not +answer a word. She became as white as her collar, her ruddy lips +blanched, her eyes stared. + +"So," said she, with her teeth tightly shut to contain herself, "so +you are going to get married?" + +"Alas, I must," he answered with a hypocritical sigh. "You know +that lately I have only been able to get money for you by borrowing +from my friend; his purse will not be at my service forever." + +Jenny took Hector by the hand, and led him to the window. There, +looking intently at him, as if her gaze could frighten the truth +out of him, she said, slowly: + +"It is really true, is it, that you are going to leave me to get +married?" + +Hector disengaged one of his hands, and placed it on his heart. + +"I swear it on my honor," said he. + +"I ought to believe you, then." + +Jenny returned to the middle of the room. Standing erect before +the mirror, she put on her hat, quietly disposing its ribbons as +if nothing had occurred. When she was ready to go, she went up +to Tremorel. "For the last time," said she, in a tone which she +forced to be firm, and which belied her tearful, glistening eyes. +"For the last time, Hector, are we really to part?" + +"We must." + +Jenny made a gesture which Tremorel did not see; her face had a +malicious expression; her lips parted to utter some sarcastic +response; but she recovered herself almost immediately. + +"I am going, Hector," said she, after a moment's reflection; "If +you are really leaving me to get married, you shall never hear of +me again." + +"Why, Jenny, I hope I shall still remain your friend." + +"Well, only if you abandon me for another reason, remember what I +tell you; you will be a dead man, and she, a lost woman." + +She opened the door; he tried to take her hand; she repulsed him. + +"Adieu!" + +Hector ran to the window to assure himself of her departure. She +was ascending the avenue leading to the station. + +"Well, that's over," thought he, with a sigh of relief. "Jenny was +a good girl." + + + +XVI + +The count told half a truth when he spoke to Jenny of his marriage. +Sauvresy and he had discussed the subject, and if the matter was +not as ripe as he had represented, there was at least some prospect +of such an event. Sauvresy had proposed it in his anxiety to +complete his work of restoring Hector to fortune and society. + +One evening, about a month before the events just narrated, he had +led Hector into the library, saying: + +"Give me your ear for a quarter of an hour, and don't answer me +hastily. What I am going to propose to you deserves serious +reflection." + +"Well, I can be serious when it is necessary." + +"Let's begin with your debts. Their payment is not yet completed, +but enough has been done to enable us to foresee the end. It is +certain that you will have, after all debts are paid, from three +to four hundred thousand francs." + +Hector had never, in his wildest hopes, expected such success. + +"Why, I'm going to be rich," exclaimed he joyously. + +"No, not rich, but quite above want. There is, too, a mode in +which you can regain your lost position." + +"A mode? what?" + +Sauvresy paused a moment, and looked steadily at his friend. + +"You must marry," said he at last. + +This seemed to surprise Hector, but not disagreeably. + +"I, marry? It's easier to give that advice than to follow it." + +"Pardon me--you ought to know that I do not speak rashly. What +would you say to a young girl of good family, pretty, well brought +up, so charming that, excepting my own wife, I know of no one more +attractive, and who would bring with her a dowry of a million?" + +"Ah, my friend, I should say that I adore her! And do you know +such an angel?" + +"Yes, and you too, for the angel is Mademoiselle Laurence Courtois." + +Hector's radiant face overclouded at this name, and he made a +discouraged gesture. + +"Never," said he. "That stiff and obstinate old merchant, Monsieur +Courtois, would never consent to give his daughter to a man who has +been fool enough to waste his fortune." + +Sauvresy shrugged his shoulders. + +"Now, there's what it is to have eyes, and not see. Know that this +Courtois, whom you think so obstinate, is really the most romantic +of men, and an ambitious old fellow to boot. It would seem to him +a grand good speculation to give his daughter to the Count Hector de +Tremorel, cousin of the Duke of Samblemeuse, the relative of the +Commarins, even though you hadn't a sou. What wouldn't he give to +have the delicious pleasure of saying, Monsieur the Count, my +son-in-law; or my daughter, Madame the Countess Hector! And you +aren't ruined, you know, you are going to have an income of twenty +thousand francs, and perhaps enough more to raise your capital to a +million." + +Hector was silent. He had thought his life ended, and now, all of +a sudden, a splendid perspective unrolled itself before him. He +might then rid himself of the patronizing protection of his friend; +he would be free, rich, would have a better wife, as he thought, +than Bertha; his house would outshine Sauvresy's. The thought of +Bertha crossed his mind, and it occurred to him that he, might thus +escape a lover who although beautiful and loving, was proud and bold, +and whose domineering temper began to be burdensome to him. + +"I may say," said he, seriously to his friend, "that I have always +thought Monsieur Courtois an excellent and honorable man, and +Mademoiselle Laurence seems to me so accomplished a young lady, that +a man might be happy in marrying her even without a dowry." + +"So much the better, my dear Hector, so much the better. But you +know, the first thing is to engage Laurence's affections; her father +adores her, and would not, I am sure, give her to a man whom she +herself had not chosen." + +"Don't disturb yourself," answered Hector, with a gesture of triumph, +"she will love me." + +The next day he took occasion to encounter M. Courtois, who invited +him to dinner. The count employed all his practised seductions on +Laurence, which were so brilliant and able that they were well +fitted to surprise and dazzle a young girl. It was not long before +the count was the hero of the mayor's household. Nothing formal +had been said, nor any direct allusion or overture made; yet M. +Courtois was sure that Hector would some day ask his daughter's +hand, and that he should freely answer, "yes;" while he thought it +certain that Laurence would not say "no." + +Bertha suspected nothing; she was now very much worried about Jenny, +and saw nothing else. Sauvresy, after spending an evening with the +count at the mayor's, during which Hector had not once quitted the +whist-table, decided to speak to his wife of the proposed marriage, +which he thought would give her an agreeable surprise. At his first +words, she grew pale. Her emotion was so great that, seeing she +would betray herself, she hastily retired to her boudoir. Sauvresy, +quietly seated in one of the bedroom arm-chairs, continued to +expatiate on the advantages of such a marriage--raising his voice, +so that Bertha might hear him in the neighboring room. + +"Do you know," said he, "that our friend has an income of sixty +thousand crowns? We'll find an estate for him near by, and then we +shall see him and his wife every day. They will be very pleasant +society for us in the autumn months. Hector is a fine fellow, and +you've often told me how charming Laurence is." + +Bertha did not reply. This unexpected blow was so terrible that +she could not think clearly, and her brain whirled. + +"You don't say anything," pursued Sauvresy. "Don't you approve of +my project? I thought you'd be enchanted with it." + +She saw that if she were silent any longer, her husband would go +in and find her sunk upon a chair, and would guess all. She made +an effort and said, in a strangled voice, without attaching any +sense to her words: + +"Yes, yes; it is a capital idea." + +"How you say that! Do you see any objections?" + +She was trying to find some objection, but could not. + +"I have a little fear of Laurence's future," said she at last. + +"Bah! Why?" + +"I only say what I've heard you say. You told me that Monsieur +Tremorel has been a libertine, a gambler, a prodigal--" + +"All the more reason for trusting him. His past follies guarantee +his future prudence. He has received a lesson which he will not +forget. Besides, he will love his wife." + +"How do you know?" + +"Parbleu, he loves her already." + +"Who told you so?" + +"Himself." + +And Sauvresy began to laugh about Hector's passion, which he said +was becoming quite pastoral. + +"Would you believe," said he, laughing, "that he thinks our worthy +Courtois a man of wit? Ah, what spectacles these lovers look +through! He spends two or three hours every day with the mayor. +What do you suppose he does there?" + +Bertha, by great effort, succeeded in dissembling her grief; she +reappeared with a smiling face. She went and came, apparently calm, +though suffering the bitterest anguish a woman can endure. And she +could not run to Hector, and ask him if it were true! + +For Sauvresy must be deceiving her. Why? She knew not. No matter. +She felt her hatred of him increasing to disgust; for she excused +and pardoned her lover, and she blamed her husband alone. Whose +idea was this marriage? His. Who had awakened Hector's hopes, and +encouraged them? He, always he. While he had been harmless, she +had been able to pardon him for having married her; she had +compelled herself to bear him, to feign a love quite foreign to her +heart. But now he became hateful; should she submit to his +interference in a matter which was life or death to her? + +She did not close her eyes all night; she had one of those horrible +nights in which crimes are conceived. She did not find herself +alone with Hector until after breakfast the next day, in the +billiard-hall. + +"Is it true?" she asked. + +The expression of her face was so menacing that he quailed before +it. He stammered: + +"True--what?" + +"Your marriage." + +He was silent at first, asking himself whether he should tell the +truth or equivocate. At last, irritated by Bertha's imperious tone, +he replied: + +"Yes." + +She was thunderstruck at this response. Till then, she had a +glimmer of hope. She thought that he would at least try to reassure +her, to deceive her. There are times when a falsehood is the highest +homage. But no--he avowed it. She was speechless; words failed her. + +Tremorel began to tell her the motives which prompted his conduct. +He could not live forever at Valfeuillu. What could he, with his +habits and tastes, do with a few thousand crowns a year? He was +thirty; he must, now or never, think of the future. M. Courtois +would give his daughter a million, and at his death there would be +a great deal more. Should he let this chance slip? He cared little +for Laurence, it was the dowry he wanted. He took no pains to +conceal his meanness; he rather gloried in it, speaking of the +marriage as simply a bargain, in which he gave his name and title +in exchange for riches. Bertha stopped him with a look full of +contempt. + +"Spare yourself," said she. "You love Laurence." + +He would have protested; he really disliked her. + +"Enough," resumed Bertha. "Another woman would have reproached you; +I simply tell you that this marriage shall not be; I do not wish it. +Believe me, give it up frankly, don't force me to act." + +She retired, shutting the door violently; Hector was furious. + +"How she treats me!" said he to himself. "Just as a queen would +speak to a serf. Ah, she don't want me to marry Laurence!" His +coolness returned, and with it serious reflections. If he insisted +on marrying, would not Bertha carry out her threats? Evidently; +for he knew well that she was one of those women who shrink from +nothing, whom no consideration could arrest. He guessed what she +would do, from what she had said in a quarrel with him about Jenny. +She had told him, "I will confess everything to Sauvresy, and we +will be the more bound together by shame than by all the ceremonies +of the church." + +This was surely the mode she would adopt to break a marriage which +was so hateful to her; and Tremorel trembled at the idea of Sauvresy +knowing all. + +"What would he do," thought he, "if Bertha told him? He would kill +me off-hand--that's what I would do in his place. Suppose he +didn't; I should have to fight a duel with him, and if I killed him, +quit the country. Whatever would happen, my marriage is irrevocably +broken, and Bertha seems to be on my hands for all time." + +He saw no possible way out of the horrible situation in which he had +put himself. + +"I must wait," thought he. + +And he waited, going secretly to the mayor's, for he really loved +Laurence. He waited, devoured by anxiety, struggling between +Sauvresy's urgency and Bertha's threats. How he detested this woman +who held him, whose will weighed so heavily on him! Nothing could +curb her ferocious obstinacy. She had one fixed idea. He had +thought to conciliate her by dismissing Jenny. It was a mistake. +When he said to her: + +"Bertha, I shall never see Jenny again." + +She answered, ironically: + +"Mademoiselle Courtois will be very grateful to you!" + +That evening, while Sauvresy Was crossing the court-yard, he saw a +beggar at the gate, making signs to him. + +"What do you want, my good man?" + +The beggar looked around to see that no one was listening. + +"I have brought you a note," said he, rapidly, and in a low tone. +"I was told to give it, only to you, and to ask you to read it when +you are alone." + +He mysteriously slipped a note, carefully sealed, into Sauvresy's +hand. + +"It comes from pretty girl," added he, winking. + +Sauvresy, turning his back to the house, opened it and read: + + "SIR--You will do a great favor to a poor and unhappy girl, if + you will come to-morrow to the Belle Image, at Corbeil, where + you will be awaited all day. + + "Your humble servant, + "JENNY F---." + +There was also a postscript. + + "Please, sir, don't say a word of this to the Count de Tremorel." + +"Ah ha," thought Sauvresy, "there's some trouble about Hector, +that's bad for the marriage." + +"I was told, sir," said the beggar, "there would be an answer." + +"Say that I will come," answered Sauvresy, throwing him a franc piece. + + + + +XVII + +The next day was cold and damp. A fog, so thick that one could not +discern objects ten steps off, hung over the earth. Sauvresy, after +breakfast, took his gun and whistled to his dogs. + +"I'm going to take a turn in Mauprevoir wood," said he. + +"A queer idea," remarked Hector, "for you won't see the end of your +gun-barrel in the woods." + +"No matter, if I see some pheasants." + +This was only a pretext, for Sauvresy, on leaving Valfeuillu, took +the direct road to Corbeil, and half an hour later, faithful to his +promise, he entered the Belle Image tavern. + +Jenny was waiting for him in the large room which had always been +reserved for her since she became a regular customer of the house. +Her eyes were red with recent tears; she was very pale, and her +marble color showed that she had not slept. Her breakfast lay +untouched on the table near the fireplace, where a bright fire was +burning. When Sauvresy came in, she rose to meet him, and took him +by the hand with a friendly motion. + +"Thank you for coming," said she. "Ah, you are very good." + +Jenny was only a girl, and Sauvresy detested girls; but her grief +was so sincere and seemed so deep, that he was touched. + +"You are suffering, Madame?" asked he. + +"Oh, yes, very much." + +Her tears choked her, and she concealed her face in her handkerchief. + +"I guessed right," thought Sauvresy. "Hector has deserted her. +Now I must smooth the wound, and yet make future meetings between +them impossible." + +He took the weeping Jenny's hand, and softly pulled away the +handkerchief. + +"Have courage," said he. + +She lifted her tearful eyes to him, and said: + +"You know, then?" + +"I know nothing, for, as you asked me, I have said nothing to +Tremorel; but I can imagine what the trouble is." + +"He will not see me any more," murmured Jenny. "He has deserted me." + +Sauvresy summoned up all his eloquence. The moment to be persuasive +and paternal had come. He drew a chair up to Jenny's, and sat down. + +"Come, my child," pursued he, "be resigned. People are not always +young, you know. A time comes when the voice of reason must be +heard. Hector does not desert you, but he sees the necessity of +assuring his future, and placing his life on a domestic foundation; +he feels the need of a home." + +Jenny stopped crying. Nature took the upper hand, and her tears +were dried by the fire of anger which took possession of her. She +rose, overturning her chair, and walked restlessly up and down the +room. + +"Do you believe that?" said she. "Do you believe that Hector +troubles himself about his future? I see you don't know his +character. He dream of a home, or a family? He never has and never +will think of anything but himself. If he had any heart, would he +have gone to live with you as he has? He had two arms to gain his +bread and mine. I was ashamed to ask money of him, knowing that +what he gave me came from you." + +"But he is my friend, my dear child." + +"Would you do as he has done?" + +Sauvresy did not know what to say; he was embarrassed by the logic +of this daughter of the people, judging her lover rudely, but justly. + +"Ah, I know him, I do," continued Jenny, growing more excited as her +mind reverted to the past. "He has only deceived me once--the +morning he came and told me he was going to kill himself. I was +stupid enough to think him dead, and to cry about it. He, kill +himself? Why, he's too much of a coward to hurt himself! Yes, I +love him, but I don't esteem him. That's our fate, you see, only +to love the men we despise." + +Jenny talked loud, gesticulating, and every now and then thumping +the table with her fist so that the bottles and glasses jingled. +Sauvresy was somewhat fearful lest the hotel people should hear her; +they knew him, and had seen him come in. He began to be sorry that +he had come, and tried to calm the girl. + +"But Hector is not deserting you," repeated he. "He will assure +you a good position." + +"Humph! I should laugh at such a thing! Have I any need of him? +As long as I have ten fingers and good eyes, I shall not be at the +mercy of any man. He made me change my name, and wanted to accustom +me to luxury! And now there is neither a Miss Jenny, nor riches, but +there is a Pelagie, who proposes to get her fifty sous a day, without +much trouble." + +"No," said Sauvresy, "you will not need--" + +"What? To work? But I like work; I am not a do-nothing. I will +go back to my old life. I used to breakfast on a sou's worth of +biscuit and a sou's worth of potatoes, and was well and happy. On +Sundays, I dined at the Turk for thirty sous. I laughed more then +in one afternoon, than in all the years I have known Tremorel." + +She no longer cried, nor was she angry; she was laughing. She was +thinking of her old breakfasts, and her feasts at the Turk. + +Sauvresy was stupefied. He had no idea of this Parisian nature, +detestable and excellent, emotional to excess, nervous, full of +transitions, which laughs and cries, caresses and strikes in the +same minute, which a passing idea whirls a hundred leagues from +the present moment. + +"So," said Jenny, more calmly, "I snap my fingers at Hector,"-- +she had just said exactly the contrary, and had forgotten it-- +"I don't care for him, but I will not let him leave me in this way. +It sha'n't be said that he left me for another. I won't have it." + +Jenny was one of those women who do not reason, but who feel; with +whom it is folly to argue, for their fixed idea is impregnable to +the most victorious arguments. Sauvresy asked himself why she had +asked him to come, and said to himself that the part he had intended +to play would be a difficult one. But he was patient. + +"I see, my child," he commenced, "that you haven't understood or +even heard me. I told you that Hector was intending to marry." + +"He!" answered Jenny, with an ironical gesture. "He get married." + +She reflected a moment, and added: + +"If it were true, though--" + +"I tell you it is so." + +"No," cried Jenny, "no, that can't be possible. He loves another, +I am sure of it, for I have proofs." + +Sauvresy smiled; this irritated her. + +"What does this letter mean," cried she warmly, "which I found in +his pocket, six months ago? It isn't signed to be sure, but it must +have come from a woman." + +"A letter?" + +"Yes, one that destroys all doubts. Perhaps you ask, why I did not +speak to him about it? Ah, you see, I did not dare. I loved him. +I was afraid if I said anything, and it was true he loved another, +I should lose him. And so I resigned myself to humiliation, I +concealed myself to weep, for I said to myself, he will come back to +me. Poor fool!" + +"Well, but what will you do?" + +"Me? I don't know--anything. I didn't say anything about the +letter, but I kept it; it is my weapon--I will make use of it. +When I want to, I shall find out who she is, and then--" + +"You will compel Tremorel, who is kindly disposed toward you, to +use violence." + +"He? What can he do to me? Why, I will follow him like his shadow-- +I will cry out everywhere the name of this other. Will he have +me put in St. Lazare prison? I will invent the most dreadful +calumnies against him. They will not believe me at first; later, +part of it will be believed. I have nothing to fear--I have no +parents, no friends, nobody on earth who cares for me. That's what +it is to raise girls from the gutter. I have fallen so low that I +defy him to push me lower. So, if you are his friend, sir, advise +him to come back to me." + +Sauvresy was really alarmed; he saw clearly how real and earnest +Jenny's menaces were. There are persecutions against which the +law is powerless. But he dissimulated his alarm under the blandest +air he could assume. + +"Hear me, my child," said he. "If I give you my word of honor to +tell you the truth, you'll believe me, won't you?" + +She hesitated a moment, and said: + +"Yes, you are honorable; I will believe you." + +"Then, I swear to you that Tremorel hopes to marry a young girl who +is immensely rich, whose dowry will secure his future." + +"He tells you so; he wants you to believe it." + +"Why should he? Since he came to Valfeuillu, he could have had no +other affair than this with you. He lives in my house, as if he +were my brother, between my wife and myself, and I could tell you +how he spends his time every hour of every day as well as what I do +myself." + +Jenny opened her mouth to reply, but a sudden reflection froze the +words on her lips. She remained silent and blushed violently, +looking at Sauvresy with an indefinable expression. He did not +observe this, being inspired by a restless though aimless curiosity. +This proof, which Jenny talked about, worried him. + +"Suppose," said he, "you should show me this letter." + +She seemed to feel at these words an electric shock. + +"To you?" she said, shuddering. "Never!" + +If, when one is sleeping, the thunder rolls and the storm bursts, +it often happens that the sleep is not troubled; then suddenly, at +a certain moment, the imperceptible flutter of a passing insect's +wing awakens one. + +Jenny's shudder was like such a fluttering to Sauvresy. The sinister +light of doubt struck on his soul. Now his confidence, his +happiness, his repose, were gone forever. He rose with a flashing +eye and trembling lips. + +"Give me the letter," said he, in an imperious tone. Jenny recoiled +with terror. She tried to conceal her agitation, to smile, to turn +the matter into a joke. + +"Not to-day," said she. "Another time; you are too curious." + +But Sauvresy's anger was terrible; he became as purple as if he had +had a stroke of apoplexy, and he repeated, in a choking voice: + +"The letter, I demand the letter." + +"Impossible," said Jenny. "Because," she added, struck with an +idea, "I haven't got it here." + +"Where is it?" + +"At my room, in Paris." + +"Come, then, let us go there." + +She saw that she was caught; and she could find no more excuses, +quick-witted as she was. She might, however, easily have followed +Sauvresy, put his suspicions to sleep with her gayety, and when +once in the Paris streets, might have eluded him and fled. But she +did not think of that. It occurred to her that she might have time +to reach the door, open it, and rush downstairs. She started to do +so. Sauvresy caught her at a bound, shut the door, and said, in a +low, hoarse voice: + +"Wretched girl! Do you wish me to strike you?" + +He pushed her into a chair, returned to the door, double locked it, +and put the keys in his pocket. "Now," said he, returning to the +girl, "the letter." + +Jenny had never been so terrified in her life. This man's rage +made her tremble; she saw that he was beside himself, that she was +completely at his mercy; yet she still resisted him. + +"You have hurt me very much," said she, crying, "but I have done +you no harm." + +He grasped her hands in his, and bending over her, repeated: + +"For the last time, the letter; give it to me, or I will take it +by force." + +It would have been folly to resist longer. "Leave me alone," said +she. "You shall have it." + +He released her, remaining, however, close by her side, while she +searched in all her pockets. Her hair had been loosened in the +struggle, her collar was torn, she was tired, her teeth chattered, +but her eyes shone with a bold resolution. + +"Wait--here it is--no. It's odd--I am sure I've got it though-- +I had it a minute ago--" + +And, suddenly, with a rapid gesture, she put the letter, rolled into +a ball, into her mouth, and tried to swallow it. But Sauvresy as +quickly grasped her by the throat, and she was forced to disgorge it. + +He had the letter at last. His hands trembled so that he could +scarcely open it. + +It was, indeed, Bertha's writing. + +Sauvresy tottered with a horrible sensation of dizziness; he could +not see clearly; there was a red cloud before his eyes; his legs +gave way under him, he staggered, and his hands stretched out for +a support. Jenny, somewhat recovered, hastened to give him help; +but her touch made him shudder, and he repulsed her. What had +happened he could not tell. Ah, he wished to read this letter and +could not. He went to the table, turned out and drank two large +glasses of water one after another. The cold draught restored him, +his blood resumed its natural course, and he could see. The note +was short, and this was what he read: + +"Don't go to-morrow to Petit-Bourg; or rather, return before +breakfast. He has just told me that he must go to Melun, and that +he should return late. A whole day!" + +"He"--that was himself. This other lover of Hector's was Bertha, +his wife. For a moment he saw nothing but that; all thought was +crushed within him. His temples beat furiously, he heard a dreadful +buzzing in his ears, it seemed to him as if the earth were about to +swallow him up. He fell into a chair; from purple he became ashy +white. Great tears trickled down his cheeks. + +Jenny understood the miserable meanness of her conduct when she saw +this great grief, this silent despair, this man with a broken heart. +Was she not the cause of all? She had guessed who the writer of the +note was. She thought when she asked Sauvresy to come to her, that +she could tell him all, and thus avenge herself at once upon Hector +and her rival. Then, on seeing this man refusing to comprehend her +hints, she had been full of pity for him. She had said to herself +that he would be the one who would be most cruelly punished; and +then she had recoiled--but too late--and he had snatched the +secret from her. + +She approached Sauvresy and tried to take his hands; he still +repulsed her. + +"Let me alone," said he. + +"Pardon me, sir--I am a wretch, I am horrified at myself." + +He rose suddenly; he was gradually coming to himself. + +"What do you want?" + +"That letter--I guessed--" + +He burst into a loud, bitter, discordant laugh, and replied: + +"God forgive me! Why, my dear, did you dare to suspect my wife?" + +While Jenny was muttering confused excuses, he drew out his +pocket-book and took from it all the money it contained--some +seven or eight hundred francs--which he put on the table. + +"Take this, from Hector," said he, "he will not permit you to suffer +for anything; but, believe me, you had best let him get married." + +Then he mechanically took up his gun, opened the door, and went out. +His dogs leaped upon him to caress him; he kicked them off. Where +was he going? What was he going to do? + + + + +XVIII + +A small, fine, chilly rain had succeeded the morning fog; but +Sauvresy did not perceive it. He went across the fields with his +head bare, wandering at hazard, without aim or discretion. He +talked aloud as he went, stopping ever and anon, then resuming +his course. The peasants who met him--they all knew him--turned +to look at him after having saluted him, asking themselves whether +the master of Valfeuillu had not gone mad. Unhappily he was not +mad. Overwhelmed by an unheard-of, unlooked-for catastrophe, his +brain had been for a moment paralyzed. But one by one he collected +his scattered ideas and acquired the faculty of thinking and of +suffering. Each one of his reflections increased his mortal anguish. +Yes, Bertha and Hector had deceived, had dishonored him. She, +beloved to idolatry; he, his best and oldest friend, a wretch that +he had snatched from misery, who owed him everything. And it was +in his house, under his own roof, that this infamy had taken place. +They had taken advantage of his noble trust, had made a dupe of him. +The frightful discovery not only embittered the future, but also +the past. He longed to blot out of his life these years passed with +Bertha, with whom, but the night before, he had recalled these +"happiest years of his life." The memory of his former happiness +filled his soul with disgust. But how had this been done? When? +How was it he had seen nothing of it? And now things came into +his mind which should have warned him had he not been blind. He +recalled certain looks of Bertha, certain tones of voice, which were +an avowal. At times, he tried to doubt. There are misfortunes so +great that to be believed there must be more than evidence. + +"It is not possible!" muttered he. + +Seating himself upon a prostrate tree in the midst of Mauprevoir +forest, he studied the fatal letter for the tenth time within four +hours. + +"It proves all," said he, "and it proves nothing." + +And he read once more. + +"Do not go to-morrow to Petit-Bourg--" + +Well, had he not again and again, in his idiotic confidence, said +to Hector: + +"I shall be away to-morrow, stay here and keep Bertha company." + +This sentence, then, had no positive signification. But why add: + +"Or rather, return before breakfast." + +This was what betrayed fear, that is, the fault. To go away and +return again anon, was to be cautious, to avoid suspicion. Then, +why "he," instead of, "Clement?" This word was striking. "He"-- +that is, the dear one, or else, the master that one hates. There +is no medium--'tis the husband, or the lover. "He," is never an +indifferent person. A husband is lost when his wife, in speaking +of him, says, "He." + +But when had Bertha written these few lines? Doubtless some evening +after they had retired to their room. He had said to her, "I'm +going to-morrow to Melun," and then she had hastily scratched off +this note and given it, in a book, to Hector. + +Alas! the edifice of his happiness, which had seemed to him strong +enough to defy every tempest of life, had crumbled, and he stood +there lost in the midst of its debris. No more happiness, joys, +hopes--nothing! All his plans for the future rested on Bertha; her +name was mingled in his every dream, she was at once the future and +the dream. He had so loved her that she had become something of +himself, that he could not imagine himself without her. Bertha +lost to him, he saw no direction in life to take, he had no further +reason for living. He perceived this so vividly that the idea of +suicide came to him. He had his gun, powder and balls; his death +would be attributed to a hunting accident, and all would be over. + +Oh, but the guilty ones! + +They would doubtless go on in their infamous comedy--would seem +to mourn for him, while really their hearts would bound with joy. +No more husband, no more hypocrisies or terrors. His will giving +his fortune to Bertha, they would be rich. They would sell +everything, and would depart rejoicing to some distant clime. As +to his memory, poor man, it would amuse them to think of him as the +cheated and despised husband. + +"Never!" cried he, drunk with fury, "never! I must kill myself, +but first, I must avenge my dishonor!" + +But he tried in vain to imagine a punishment cruel or terrible +enough. What chastisement could expiate the horrible tortures which +he endured? He said to himself that, in order to assure his +vengeance, he must wait--and he swore that he would wait. He would +feign the same stolid confidence, and resigned himself to see and +hear everything. + +"My hypocrisy will equal theirs," thought he. + +Indeed a cautious duplicity was necessary. Bertha was most cunning, +and at the first suspicion would fly with her lover. Hector had +already--thanks to him--several hundred thousand francs. The +idea that they might escape his vengeance gave him energy and a +clear head. + +It was only then that he thought of the flight of time, the rain +falling in torrents, and the state of his clothes. + +"Bah!" thought he, "I will make up some story to account for myself." + +He was only a league from Valfeuillu, but he was an hour and a half +reaching home. He was broken, exhausted; he felt chilled to the +marrow of his bones. But when he entered the gate, he had succeeded +in assuming his usual expression, and the gayety which so well +hinted his perfect trustfulness. He had been waited for, but in +spite of his resolutions, he could not sit at table between this +man and woman, his two most cruel enemies. He said that he had +taken cold, and would go to bed. Bertha insisted in vain that he +should take at least a bowl of broth, and a glass of claret. + +"Really," said he, "I don't feel well." + +When he had retired, Bertha said: + +"Did you notice, Hector?" + +"What?" + +"Something unusual has happened to him." + +"Very likely, after being all day in the rain." + +"No. His eye had a look I never saw before." + +"He seemed to be very cheerful, as he always is." + +"Hector, my husband suspects!" + +"He? Ah, my poor good friend has too much confidence in us to think +of being jealous." + +"You deceive yourself, Hector; he did not embrace me when he came +in, and it is the first time since our marriage." + +Thus, at the very first, he had made a blunder. He knew it well; +but it was beyond his power to embrace Bertha at that moment; and +he was suffering more than he thought he should. When his wife and +his friend ascended to his room, after dinner, they found him +shivering under the sheets, red, his forehead burning, his throat +dry, and his eyes shining with an unusual brilliancy. A fever soon +came on, attended by delirium. A doctor was called, who at first +said he would not answer for him. The next day he was worse. From +this time both Hector and Bertha conceived for him the most tender +devotion. Did they think they should thus in some sort expiate +their crime? It is doubtful. More likely they tried to impose on +the people about them; everyone was anxious for Sauvresy. They +never deserted him for a moment, passing the night by turns near +his bed. And it was painful to watch over him; a furious delirium +never left him. Several times force had to be used to keep him on +the bed; he tried to throw himself out of the window. The third +day he had a strange fancy; he did not wish to stay in his chamber. +He kept crying out: + +"Carry me away from here, carry me away from here." + +The doctor advised that he should be humored; so a bed was made up +for him in a little room on the ground-floor, overlooking the garden. +His wanderings did not betray anything of his suspicions; perhaps +the firm will was able even to control the delirium. The fever +finally yielded on the ninth day. His breathing became calmer, and +he slept. When he awoke, reason had returned. That was a frightful +moment. He had, so to speak, to take up the burden of his misery. +At first he thought it the memory of a horrid night-mare; but no. +He had not dreamed. He recalled the Belle Image, Jenny, the forest, +the letter. What had become of the letter? Then, having the vague +impression of a serious illness, he asked himself if he had said +anything to betray the source of his misery. This anxiety prevented +his making the slightest movement, and he opened his eyes softly and +cautiously. It was eleven at night, and all the servants had gone +to bed. Hector and Bertha alone were keeping watch; he was reading +a paper, she was crocheting. Sauvresy saw by their placid +countenances that he had betrayed nothing. He moved slightly; +Bertha at once arose and came to him. + +"How are you, dear Clement?" asked she, kissing him fondly on the +forehead. + +"I am no longer in pain." + +"You see the result of being careless." + +"How many days have I been sick?" + +"Eight days." + +"Why was I brought here?" + +"Because you wished it." + +Tremorel had approached the bedside. + +"You refused to stay upstairs," said he, "you were ungovernable +till we had you brought here." + +"But don't tire yourself," resumed Hector. "Go to sleep again, and +you will be well by to-morrow. And good-night, for I am going to +bed now, and shall return and wake your wife at four o'clock." + +He went out, and Bertha, having given Sauvresy something to drink, +returned to her seat. + +"What a friend Tremorel is," murmured she. Sauvresy did not answer +this terribly ironical exclamation. He shut his eyes, pretended to +sleep, and thought of the letter. What had he done with it? He +remembered that he had carefully folded it and put it in the +right-hand pocket of his vest. He must have this letter. It would +balk his vengeance, should it fall into his wife's hands; and this +might happen at any moment. It was a miracle that his valet had +not put it on the mantel, as he was accustomed to do with the things +which he found in his master's pockets. He was reflecting on some +means of getting it, of the possibility of going up to his bedroom, +where his vest ought to be, when Bertha got up softly. She came to +the bed and whispered gently: + +"Clement, Clement!" + +He did not open his eyes, and she, persuaded that he was sleeping, +though very lightly, stole out of the room, holding her breath as +she went. + +"Oh, the wretch!" muttered Sauvresy, "she is going to him!" + +At the same time the necessity of recovering the letter occurred to +him more vividly than ever. + +"I can get to my room," thought he, "without being seen, by the +garden and back-stairs. She thinks I'm asleep; I shall get back +and abed before she returns." + +Then, without asking himself whether he were not too feeble, or +what danger there might be in exposing himself to the cold, he got +up, threw a gown around him, put on his slippers and went toward +the door. + +"If anyone sees me, I will feign delirium," said he to himself. + +The vestibule lamp was out and he found some difficulty in opening +the door; finally, he descended into the garden. It was intensely +cold, and snow had fallen. The wind shook the limbs of the trees +crusted with ice. The front of the house was sombre. One window +only was lighted--that of Tremorel's room; that was lighted +brilliantly, by a lamp and a great blazing fire. The shadow of a +man--of Hector--rested on the muslin curtains; the shape was +distinct. He was near the window, and his forehead was pressed +against the panes. Sauvresy instinctively stopped to look at his +friend, who was so at home in his house, and who, in exchange for +the most brotherly hospitality, had brought dishonor, despair and +death. + +Hector made a sudden movement, and turned around as if he was +surprised by an unwonted noise. What was it? Sauvresy only knew +too well. Another shadow appeared on the curtain--that of Bertha. +And he had forced himself to doubt till now! Now proofs had come +without his seeking. What had brought her to that room, at that +hour? She seemed to be talking excitedly. He thought he could +hear that full, sonorous voice, now as clear as metal, now soft and +caressing, which had made all the chords of passion vibrate in him. +He once more saw those beautiful eyes which had reigned so +despotically over his heart, and whose expressions he knew so well. +But what was she doing? Doubtless she had gone to ask Hector +something, which he refused her, and she was pleading with him; +Sauvresy saw that she was supplicating, by her motions; he knew the +gesture well. She lifted her clasped hands as high as her forehead, +bent her head, half shut her eyes. What languor had been in her +voice when she used to say: + +"Say, dear Clement, you will, will you not?" + +And now she was using the same blandishments on another. Sauvresy +was obliged to support himself against a tree. Hector was evidently +refusing what she wished; then she shook her finger menacingly, and +tossed her head angrily, as if she were saying: + +"You won't? You shall see, then." + +And then she returned to her supplications. + +"Ah," thought Sauvresy, "he can resist her prayers; I never had +such courage. He can preserve his coolness, his will, when she +looks at him; I never said no to her; rather, I never waited for +her to ask anything of me; I have passed my life in watching her +lightest fancies, to gratify them. Perhaps that is what has +ruined me!" + +Hector was obstinate, and Bertha was roused little by little; she +must be angry. She recoiled, holding out her arms, her head thrown +back; she was threatening him. At last he was conquered; he nodded, +"Yes." Then she flung herself upon him, and the two shadows were +confounded in a long embrace. + +Sauvresy could not repress an agonized cry, which was lost amid the +noises of the night. He had asked for certainty; here it was. The +truth, indisputable, evident, was clear to him. He had to seek for +nothing more, now, except for the means to punish surely and +terribly. Bertha and Hector were talking amicably. Sauvresy saw +that she was about to go downstairs, and that he could not now go +for the letter. He went in hurriedly, forgetting, in his fear of +being discovered, to lock the garden door. He did not perceive that +he had been standing with naked feet in the snow, till he had +returned to his bedroom again; he saw some flakes on his slippers, +and they were damp; quickly he threw them under the bed, and jumped +in between the clothes, and pretended to be asleep. + +It was time, for Bertha soon came in. She went to the bed, and +thinking that he had not woke up, returned to her embroidery by the +fire. Tremorel also soon reappeared; he had forgotten to take his +paper, and had come back for it. He seemed uneasy. + +"Have you been out to-night, Madame?" asked he, in a low voice. + +"No." + +"Have all the servants gone to bed?" + +"I suppose so; but why do you ask?" + +"Since I have been upstairs, somebody has gone out into the garden, +and come back again." + +Bertha looked at him with a troubled glance. + +"Are you sure of what you say?" + +"Certainly. Snow is falling, and whoever went out brought some +back on his shoes. This has melted in the vestibule--" + +Mme. Sauvresy seized the lamp, and interrupting Hector, said: + +"Come." + +Tremorel was right. Here and there on the vestibule pavement were +little puddles. + +"Perhaps this water has been here some time," suggested Bertha. + +"No. It was not there an hour ago, I could swear. Besides, see, +here is a little snow that has not melted yet." + +"It must have been one of the servants." + +Hector went to the door and examined it. + +"I do not think so," said he. "A servant would have shut the bolts; +here they are, drawn back. Yet I myself shut the door to-night, and +distinctly recollect fastening the bolts." + +"It's very strange!" + +"And all the more so, look you, because the traces of the water do +not go much beyond the drawing-room door." + +They remained silent, and exchanged anxious looks. The same +terrible thought occurred to them both. + +"If it were he?" + +But why should he have gone into the garden? It could not have +been to spy on them. + +They did not think of the window. + +"It couldn't have been Clement," said Bertha, at last. "He was +asleep when I went back, and he is in a calm and deep slumber now." + +Sauvresy, stretched upon his bed, heard what his enemies were +saying. He cursed his imprudence. + +"Suppose," thought he, "they should think of looking at my gown and +slippers!" + +Happily this simple idea did not occur to them; after reassuring +each other as well as they were able, they separated; but each heart +carried an anxious doubt. Sauvresy on that night had a terrible +crisis in his illness. Delirium, succeeding this ray of reason, +renewed its possession of his brain. The next morning Dr. R--- +pronounced him in more danger than ever; and sent a despatch to +Paris, saying that he would be detained at Valfeuillu three or four +days. The distemper redoubled in violence; very contradictory +symptoms appeared. Each day brought some new phase of it, which +confounded the foresight of the doctors. Every time that Sauvresy +had a moment of reason, the scene at the window recurred to him, +and drove him to madness again. + +On that terrible night when he had gone out into the snow, he had +not been mistaken; Bertha was really begging something of Hector. +This was it: + +M. Courtois, the mayor, had invited Hector to accompany himself and +his family on an excursion to Fontainebleau on the following day. +Hector had cordially accepted the invitation. Bertha could not bear +the idea of his spending the day in Laurence's company, and begged +him not to go. She told him there were plenty of excuses to relieve +him from his promise; for instance, he might urge that it would not +be seemly for him to go when his friend lay dangerously ill. At +first he positively refused to grant her prayer, but by her +supplications and menaces she persuaded him, and she did not go +downstairs until he had sworn that he would write to M. Courtois +that very evening declining the invitation. He kept his word, but +he was disgusted by her tyrannical behavior. He was tired of +forever sacrificing his wishes and his liberty, so that he could +plan nothing, say or promise nothing without consulting this jealous +woman, who would scarcely let him wander out of her sight. The +chain became heavier and heavier to bear, and he began to see that +sooner or later it must be wrenched apart. He had never loved +either Bertha or Jenny, or anyone, probably; but he now loved the +mayor's daughter. Her dowry of a million had at first dazzled him, +but little by little he had been subdued by Laurence's charms of +mind and person. He, the dissipated rake, was seduced by such grave +and naive innocence, such frankness and beauty; he would have +married Laurence had she been poor--as Sauvresy married Bertha. +But he feared Bertha too much to brave her suddenly, and so he +waited. The next day after the quarrel about Fontainebleau, he +declared that he was indisposed, attributed it to the want of +exercise, and took to the saddle for several hours every day +afterward. But he did not go far; only to the mayor's. Bertha at +first did not perceive anything suspicious in Tremorel's rides; it +reassured her to see him go off on his horse. After some days, +however, she thought she saw in him a certain feeling of satisfaction +concealed under the semblance of fatigue. She began to have doubts, +and these increased every time he went out; all sorts of conjectures +worried her while he was away. Where did he go? Probably to see +Laurence, whom she feared and detested. The suspicion soon became +a certainty with her. One evening Hector appeared, carrying in his +button-hole a flower which Laurence herself had put there, and which +he had forgotten to take out. Bertha took it gently, examined it, +smelt it, and, compelling herself to smile: + +"Why," said she, "what a pretty flower!" + +"So I thought," answered Hector, carelessly, "though I don't know +what it is called." + +"Would it be bold to ask who gave it to you?" + +"Not at all. It's a present from our good Plantat." + +All Orcival knew that M. Plantat, a monomaniac on flowers, never +gave them away to anyone except Mme. Laurence. Hector's evasion +was an unhappy one, and Bertha was not deceived. + +"You promised me, Hector," said she, "not to see Laurence any more, +and to give up this marriage." + +He tried to reply. + +"Let me speak," she continued, "and explain yourself afterward. +You have broken your word--you are deceiving my confidence! But +I tell you, you shall not marry her!" Then, without awaiting his +reply, she overwhelmed him with reproaches. Why had he come here +at all? She was happy in her home before she knew him. She did +not love Sauvresy, it was true; but she esteemed him, and he was +good to her. Ignorant of the happiness of true love, she did not +desire it. But he had come, and she could not resist his +fascination. And now, after having engaged her affection, he was +going to desert her, to marry another! Tremorel listened to her, +perfectly amazed at her audacity. What! She dared to pretend that +it was he who had abused her innocence, when, on the contrary, he +had sometimes been astonished at her persistency! Such was the +depth of her corruption, as it seemed to him, that he wondered +whether he were her first or her twentieth lover. And she had so +led him on, and had so forcibly made him feel the intensity of her +will, that he had been fain still to submit to this despotism. But +he had now determined to resist on the first opportunity; and he +resisted. + +"Well, yes," said he, frankly, "I did deceive you; I have no fortune-- +this marriage will give me one; I shall get married." He went on +to say that he loved Laurence less than ever, but that he coveted +her money more and more every day. "To prove this," he pursued, +"if you will find me to-morrow a girl who has twelve hundred +thousand francs instead of a million, I will marry her in preference +to Mademoiselle Courtois." + +She had never suspected he had so much courage. She had so long +moulded him like soft wax, and this unexpected conduct disconcerted +her. She was indignant, but at the same time she felt that +unhealthy satisfaction that some women feel, when they meet a master +who subdues them; and she admired Tremorel more than ever before. +This time, he had taken a tone which conquered her; she despised +him enough to think him quite capable of marrying for money. When +he had done, she said: + +"It's really so, then; you only care for the million of dowry?" + +"I've sworn it to you a hundred times." + +"Truly now, don't you love Laurence?" + +"I have never loved her, and never shall." He thought that he would +thus secure his peace until the wedding-day; once married, he cared +not what would happen. What cared he for Sauvresy? Life is only a +succession of broken friendships. What is a friend, after all? +One who can and ought to serve you. Ability consists in breaking +with people, when they cease to be useful to you. + +Bertha reflected. + +"Hear me, Hector," said she at last. "I cannot calmly resign +myself to the sacrifice which you demand. Let me have but a few +days, to accustom myself to this dreadful blow. You owe me as much-- +let Clement get well, first." + +He did not expect to see her so gentle and subdued; who would have +looked for such concessions, so easily obtained? The idea of a +snare did not occur to him. In his delight he betrayed how he +rejoiced in his liberty, which ought to have undeceived Bertha; but +she did not perceive it. He grasped her hand, and cried: + +"Ah, you are very good--you really love me." + + + + +XIX + +The Count de Tremorel did not anticipate that the respite which +Bertha begged would last long. Sauvresy had seemed better during +the last week. He got up every day, and commenced to go about the +house; he even received numerous visits from the neighbors; without +apparent fatigue. But alas, the master of Valfeuillu was only the +shadow of himself. His friends would never have recognized in that +emaciated form and white face, and burning, haggard eye, the robust +young man with red lips and beaming visage whom they remembered. +He had suffered so! He did not wish to die before avenging himself +on the wretches who had filched his happiness and his life. But +what punishment should he inflict? This fixed idea burning in his +brain, gave his look a fiery eagerness. Ordinarily, there are +three modes in which a betrayed husband may avenge himself. He +has the right, and it is almost a duty--to deliver the guilty ones +up to the law, which is on his side. He may adroitly watch them, +surprise them and kill them. There is a law which does not absolve, +but excuses him, in this. Lastly, he may affect a stolid +indifference, laugh the first and loudest at his misfortune, drive +his wife from his roof, and leave her to starve. But what poor, +wretched methods of vengeance. Give up his wife to the law? Would +not that be to offer his name, honor, and life to public ridicule? +To put himself at the mercy of a lawyer, who would drag him through +the mire. They do not defend the erring wife, they attack her +husband. And what satisfaction would he get? Bertha and Tremorel +would be condemned to a year's imprisonment, perhaps eighteen +months, possibly two years. It seemed to him simpler to kill them. +He might go in, fire a revolver at them, and they would not have +time to comprehend it, for their agony would be but for a moment; +and then? Then, he must become a prisoner, submit to a trial, +invoke the judge's mercy, and risk conviction. As to turning his +wife out of doors, that was to hand her over quietly to Hector. He +imagined them leaving Valfeuillu, hand in hand, happy and smiling, +and laughing in his face. At this thought he had a fit of cold +rage; his self-esteem adding the sharpest pains to the wounds in +his heart. None of these vulgar methods could satisfy him. He +longed for some revenge unheard-of, strange, monstrous, as his +tortures were. Then he thought of all the horrible tales he had +read, seeking one to his purpose; he had a right to be particular, +and he was determined to wait until he was satisfied. There was +only one thing that could balk his progress--Jenny's letter. What +had become of it? Had he lost it in the woods? He had looked for +it everywhere, and could not find it. + +He accustomed himself, however, to feign, finding a sort of fierce +pleasure in the constraint. He learned to assume a countenance +which completely hid his thoughts. He submitted to his wife's +caresses without an apparent shudder; and shook Hector by the hand +as heartily as ever. In the evening, when they were gathered about +the drawing-room table, he was the gayest of the three. He built +a hundred air-castles, pictured a hundred pleasure-parties, when +he was able to go abroad again. Hector rejoiced at his returning +health. + +"Clement is getting on finely," said he to Bertha, one evening. + +She understood only too well what he meant. + +"Always thinking of Laurence?" + +"Did you not permit me to hope?" + +"I asked you to wait, Hector, and you have done well not to be in +a hurry. I know a young girl who would bring you, not one, but +three millions as dowry." + +This was a painful surprise. He really had no thoughts for anyone +but Laurence, and now a new obstacle presented itself. + +"And who is that?" + +She leaned over, and whispered tremblingly in his ear: + +"I am Clement's sole heiress; perhaps he'll die; I might be a widow +to-morrow." + +Hector was petrified. + +"But Sauvresy, thank God! is getting well fast." + +Bertha fixed her large, clear eyes upon him, and with frightful +calmness said: + +"What do you know about it?" + +Tremorel dared not ask what these strange words meant. He was one +of those men who shun explanations, and who, rather than put +themselves on their guard in time, permit themselves to be drawn +on by circumstances; soft and feeble beings, who deliberately +bandage their eyes so as not to see the danger which threatens +them, and who prefer the sloth of doubt, and acts of uncertainty +to a definite and open position, which they have not the courage +to face. + +Besides, Hector experienced a childish satisfaction in seeing +Bertha's distress, though he feared and detested her. He conceived +a great opinion of his own value and merit, when he saw the +persistency and desperation with which she insisted on keeping her +hold on him. + +"Poor woman!" thought he. "In her grief at losing me, and seeing +me another's, she has begun to wish for her husband's death!" + +Such was the torpor of his moral sense that he did not see the +vileness of Bertha's and his own thoughts. + +Meanwhile Sauvresy's state was not reassuring for Hector's hopes +and plans. On the very day when he had this conversation with +Bertha, her husband was forced to take to his bed again. This +relapse took place after he had drank a glass of quinine and water, +which he had been accustomed to take just before supper; only, this +time, the symptoms changed entirely, as if one malady had yielded +to another of a very different kind. He complained of a pricking +in his skin, of vertigo, of convulsive twitches which contracted +and twisted his limbs, especially his arms. He cried out with +excruciating neuralgic pains in the face. He was seized with a +violent, persistent, tenacious craving for pepper, which nothing +could assuage. He was sleepless, and morphine in large doses +failed to bring him slumber; while he felt an intense chill within +him, as if the body's temperature were gradually diminishing. +Delirium had completely disappeared, and the sick man retained +perfectly the clearness of his mind. Sauvresy bore up wonderfully +under his pains, and seemed to take a new interest in the business +of his estates. He was constantly in consultation with bailiffs +and agents, and shut himself up for days together with notaries and +attorneys. Then, saying that he must have distractions, he received +all his friends, and when no one called, he sent for some +acquaintance to come and chat with him in order to forget his +illness. He gave no hint of what he was doing and thinking, and +Bertha was devoured by anxiety. She often watched for her husband's +agent, when, after a conference of several hours, he came out of +his room; and making herself as sweet and fascinating as possible, +she used all her cunning to find out something which would +enlighten her as to what he was about. But no one could, or at +least would, satisfy her curiosity; all gave evasive replies, as +if Sauvresy had cautioned them, or as if there were nothing to tell. + +No complaints were heard from Sauvresy. He talked constantly of +Bertha and Hector; he wished all the world to know their devotion +to him; he called them his "guardian angels," and blessed Heaven +that had given him such a wife and such a friend. Sauvresy's +illness now became so serious that Tremorel began to despair; he +became alarmed; what position would his friend's death leave him +in? Bertha, having become a widow, would be implacable. He +resolved to find out her inmost thoughts at the first opportunity; +she anticipated him, and saved him the trouble of broaching the +subject. One afternoon, when they were alone, M. Plantat being +in attendance at the sick man's bedside, Bertha commenced. + +"I want some advice, Hector, and you alone can give it to me. How +can I find out whether Clement, within the past day or two, has not +changed his will in regard to me?" + +"His will?" + +"Yes, I've already told you that by a will of which I myself have a +copy, Sauvresy has left me his whole fortune. I fear that he may +perhaps revoke it." + +"What an idea!" + +"Ah, I have reasons for my apprehensions. What are all these agents +and attorneys doing at Valfeuillu? A stroke of this man's pen may +ruin me. Don't you see that he can deprive me of his millions, and +reduce me to my dowry of fifty thousand francs?" + +"But he will not do it; he loves you--" + +"Are you sure of it? I've told you, there are three millions; I +must have this fortune--not for myself, but for you; I want it, I +must have it! But how can I find out--how? how?" + +Hector was very indignant. It was to this end, then, that his +delays had conducted him! She thought that she had a right now to +dispose of him in spite of himself, and, as it were, to purchase +him. And he could not, dared not, say anything! + +"We must be patient," said he, "and wait--" + +"Wait--for what? Till he's dead?" + +"Don't speak so." + +"Why not?" Bertha went up to him, and in a low voice, muttered: + + +"He has only a week to live; and see here--" + +She drew a little vial from her pocket, and held it up to him. + +"That is what convinces me that I am not mistaken." + +Hector became livid, and could not stifle a cry of horror. He +comprehended all now--he saw how it was that Bertha had been so +easily subdued, why she had refrained from speaking of Laurence, +her strange words, her calm confidence. + +"Poison!" stammered he, confounded. + +"Yes, poison." + +"You have not used it?" + +She fixed a hard, stern look upon him--the look which had subdued +his will, against which he had struggled in vain--and in a calm +voice, emphasizing each word, answered: + +"I have used it." + +The count was, indeed, a dangerous man, unscrupulous, not recoiling +from any wickedness when his passions were to be indulged, capable +of everything; but this horrible crime awoke in him all that remained +of honest energy. + +"Well," he cried, in disgust, "you will not use it again!" + +He hastened toward the door, shuddering; she stopped him. + +"Reflect before you act," said she, coldly. "I will betray the +fact of your relations with me; who will then believe that you are +not my accomplice?" + +He saw the force of this terrible menace, coming from Bertha. + +"Come," said she, ironically, "speak--betray me if you choose. +Whatever happens, for happiness or misery, we shall no longer be +separated; our destinies will be the same." + +Hector fell heavily into a chair, more overwhelmed than if he had +been struck with a hammer. He held his bursting forehead between +his hands; he saw himself shut up in an infernal circle, without +outlet. + +"I am lost!" he stammered, without knowing what he said, "I am lost!" + +He was to be pitied; his face was terribly haggard, great drops of +perspiration stood at the roots of his hair, his eyes wandered as +if he were insane. Bertha shook him rudely by the arm, for his +cowardice exasperated her. + +"You are afraid," she said. "You are trembling! Lost? You would +not say so, if you loved me as I do you. Will you be lost because +I am to be your wife, because we shall be free to love in the face +of all the world? Lost! Then you have no idea of what I have +endured? You don't know, then, that I am tired of suffering, +fearing, feigning." + +"Such a crime!" + +She burst out with a laugh that made him shudder. + +"You ought to have said so," said she, with a look full of contempt, +"the day you won me from Sauvresy--the day that you stole the wife +of this friend who saved your life. Do you think that was a less +horrid crime? You knew as well as I did how much my husband loved +me, and that he would have preferred to die, rather than lose me +thus." + +"But he knows nothing, suspects nothing of it." + +"You are mistaken; Sauvresy knows all." + +"Impossible!" + +"All, I tell you--and he has known all since that day when he came +home so late from hunting. Don't you remember that I noticed his +strange look, and said to you that my husband suspected something? +You shrugged your shoulders. Do you forget the steps in the +vestibule the night I went to your room? He had been spying on us. +Well, do you want a more certain proof? Look at this letter, +which I found, crumpled up and wet, in one of his vest pockets." + +She showed him the letter which Sauvresy had forcibly taken from +Jenny, and he recognized it well. + +"It is a fatality," said he, overwhelmed. "But we can separate +and break off with each other. Bertha, I can go away." + +"It's too late. Believe me, Hector, we are to-day defending our +lives. Ah, you don't know Clement! You don't know what the fury +of a man like him can be, when he sees that his confidence has +been outrageously abused, and his trust vilely betrayed. If he +has said nothing to me, and has not let us see any traces of his +implacable anger, it is because he is meditating some frightful +vengeance." + +This was only too probable, and Hector saw it clearly. + +"What shall we do?" he asked, in a hoarse voice; he was almost +speechless. + +"Find out what change he has made in his will." + +"But how?" + +"I don't know yet. I came to ask your advice, and I find you more +cowardly than a woman. Let me act, then; don't do anything yourself; +I will do all." + +He essayed an objection. + +"Enough," said she. "He must not ruin us after all--I will see-- +I will think." + +Someone below called her. She went down, leaving Hector overcome +with despair. + +That evening, during which Bertha seemed happy and smiling, his +face finally betrayed so distinctly the traces of his anguish, that +Sauvresy tenderly asked him if he were not ill? + +"You exhaust yourself tending on me, my good Hector," said he. +"How can I ever repay your devotion?" + +Tremorel had not the strength to reply. + +"And that man knows all," thought he. "What courage! What fate +can he be reserving for us?" + +The scene which was passing before Hector's eyes made his flesh +creep. Every time that Bertha gave her husband his medicine, she +took a hair-pin from her tresses, and plunged it into the little +vial which she had shown him, taking up thus some small, white +grains, which she dissolved in the potions prescribed by the doctor. + +It might be supposed that Tremorel, enslaved by his horrid position, +and harassed by increasing terror, would renounce forever his +proposed marriage with Laurence. Not so. He clung to that project +more desperately than ever. Bertha's threats, the great obstacles +now intervening, his anguish, crime, only augmented the violence of +his love for her, and fed the flame of his ambition to secure her +as his wife. A small and flickering ray of hope which lighted the +darkness of his despair, consoled and revived him, and made the +present more easy to bear. He said to himself that Bertha could not +be thinking of marrying him the day after her husband's death. +Months, a whole year must pass, and thus he would gain time; then +some day he would declare his will. What would she have to say? +Would she divulge the crime, and try to hold him as her accomplice? +Who would believe her? How could she prove that he, who loved and +had married another woman, had any interest in Sauvresy's death? +People don't kill their friends for the mere pleasure of it. Would +she provoke the law to exhume her husband? She was now in a +position, thought he, wherein she could, or would not exercise her +reason. Later on, she would reflect, and then she would be arrested +by the probability of those dangers, the certainty of which did not +now terrify her. + +He did not wish that she should ever be his wife at any price. He +would have detested her had she possessed millions; he hated her +now that she was poor, ruined, reduced to her own narrow means. +And that she was so, there was no doubt, Sauvresy indeed knew all. +He was content to wait; he knew that Laurence loved him enough to +wait for him one, or three years, if necessary. He already had +such absolute power over her, that she did not try to combat the +thoughts of him, which gently forced themselves on her, penetrated +to her soul, and filled her mind and heart. Hector said to himself +that in the interest of his designs, perhaps it was well that +Bertha was acting as she did. He forced himself to stifle his +conscience in trying to prove that he was not guilty. Who thought +of this crime? Bertha. Who was executing it? She alone. He +could only be reproached with moral complicity in it, a complicity +involuntary, forced upon him, imposed somehow by the care for his +own life. Sometimes, however, a bitter remorse seized him. He +could have understood a sudden, violent, rapid murder; could have +explained to himself a knife-stroke; but this slow death, given +drop by drop, horribly sweetened by tenderness, veiled under kisses, +appeared to him unspeakably hideous. He was mortally afraid of +Bertha, as of a reptile, and when she embraced him he shuddered +from head to foot. + +She was so calm, so engaging, so natural; her voice had the same +soft and caressing tones, that he could not forget it. She plunged +her hair-pin into the fatal vial without ceasing her conversation, +and he did not surprise her in any shrinking or shuddering, nor +even a trembling of the eyelids. She must have been made of brass. +Yet he thought that she was not cautious enough; and that she put +herself in danger of discovery; and he told her of these fears, +and how she made him tremble every moment. + +"Have confidence in me," she answered. "I want to succeed--I am +prudent." + +"But you may be suspected." + +"By whom?" + +"Eh! How do I know? Everyone--the servants, the doctor." + +"No danger. And suppose they did suspect?" + +"They would make examinations, Bertha; they would make a minute +scrutiny." + +She gave a smile of the most perfect security. + +"They might examine and experiment as much as they pleased, they +would find nothing. Do you think I am such a fool as to use +arsenic?" + +"For Heaven's sake, hush!" + +"I have procured one of those poisons which are as yet unknown, and +which defy all analysis; one of which many doctors--and learned +ones, too--could not even tell the symptoms!" + +"But where did you get this--this--" + +He dared not say, "poison." + +"Who gave you that?" resumed he. + +"What matters it? I have taken care that he who gave it to me +should run the same danger as myself, and he knows it. There's +nothing to fear from that quarter. I've paid him enough to smother +all his regrets." + +An objection came to his lips; he wanted to say, "It's too slow;" +but he had not the courage, though she read his thought in his eyes. + +"It is slow, because that suits me," said she. "Before all, I +must know about the will--and that I am trying to find out." + +She occupied herself constantly about this will, and during the +long hours that she passed at Sauvresy's bedside, she gradually, +with the greatest craft and delicacy, led her husband's mind in +the direction of his last testament, with such success that he +himself mentioned the subject which so absorbed Bertha. + +He said that he did not comprehend why people did not always have +their worldly affairs in order, and their wishes fully written down, +in case of accident. What difference did it make whether one were +ill or well? At these words Bertha attempted to stop him. Such +ideas, she said, pained her too much. She even shed real tears, +which fell down her cheeks and made her more beautiful and +irresistible than before; real tears which moistened her handkerchief. + +"You dear silly creature," said Sauvresy, "do you think that makes +one die?" + +"No; but I do not wish it." + +"But, dear, have we been any the less happy because, on the day +after our marriage, I made a will bequeathing you all my fortune? +And, stop; you have a copy of it, haven't you? If you were kind, +you would go and fetch it for me." + +She became very red, then very pale. Why did he ask for this copy? +Did he want to tear it up? A sudden thought reassured her; people +do not tear up a document which can be cancelled by a scratch of +the pen on another sheet of paper. Still, she hesitated a moment. + +"I don't know where it can be." + +"But I do. It is in the left-hand drawer of the glass cupboard; +come, please me by getting it." + +While she was gone, Sauvresy said to Hector: + +"Poor girl! Poor dear Bertha! If I died, she never would survive +me!" + +Tremorel thought of nothing to reply; his anxiety was intense and +visible. + +"And this man," thought he, "suspects something! No; it is not +possible." + +Bertha returned. + +"I have found it," said she. + +"Give it to me." + +He took the copy of his will, and read it with evident satisfaction, +nodding his head at certain passages in which he referred to his +love for his wife. When he had finished reading, he said: + +"Now give me a pen and some ink." + +Hector and Bertha reminded him that it would fatigue him to write; +but he insisted. The two guilty ones, seated at the foot of the +bed and out of Sauvresy's sight, exchanged looks of alarm. What +was he going to write? But he speedily finished it. + +"Take this," said he to Tremorel, "and read aloud what I have just +added." + +Hector complied with his friend's request, with trembling voice: + + "This day, being sound in mind, though much suffering, I declare + that I do not wish to change a line of this will. Never have I + loved my wife more--never have I so much desired to leave her + the heiress of all I possess, should I die before her. + + "CLEMENT SAUVRESY." + + +Mistress of herself as Bertha was, she succeeded in concealing the +unspeakable satisfaction with which she was filled. All her wishes +were accomplished, and yet she was able to veil her delight under +an apparent sadness. + +"Of what good is this?" said she, with a sigh. + +She said this, but half an hour afterward, when she was alone with +Hector, she gave herself up to the extravagance of her delight. + +"Nothing more to fear," exclaimed she. "Nothing! Now we shall +have liberty, fortune, love, pleasure, life! Why, Hector, we shall +have at least three millions; you see, I've got this will myself, +and I shall keep it. No more agents or notaries shall be admitted +into this house henceforth. Now I must hasten!" + +The count certainly felt a satisfaction in knowing her to be rich, +for he could much more easily get rid of a millionnaire widow than +of a poor penniless woman. Sauvresy's conduct thus calmed many +sharp anxieties. Her restless gayety, however, her confident +security, seemed monstrous to Hector. He would have wished for +more solemnity in the execution of the crime; he thought that he +ought at least to calm Bertha's delirium. + +"You will think more than once of Sauvresy," said he, in a graver +tone. + +She answered with a "prrr," and added vivaciously: + +"Of him? when and why? Oh, his memory will not weigh on me very +heavily. I trust that we shall be able to live still at Valfeuillu, +for the place pleases me; but we must also have a house at Paris-- +or we will buy yours back again. What happiness, Hector!" + +The mere prospect of this anticipated felicity so shocked Hector, +that his better self for the moment got the mastery; he essayed to +move Bertha. + +"For the last time," said he, "I implore you to renounce this +terrible, dangerous project. You see that you were mistaken--that +Sauvresy suspects nothing, but loves you as well as ever." + +The expression of Bertha's face suddenly changed; she sat quite +still, in a pensive revery. + +"Don't let's talk any more of that," said she, at last. "Perhaps +I was mistaken. Perhaps he only had doubts--perhaps, although he +has discovered something, he hopes to win me back by his goodness. +But you see--" + +She stopped. Doubtless she did not wish to alarm him. + +He was already much alarmed. The next day he went off to Melun +without a word; being unable to bear the sight of this agony, and +fearing to betray himself. But he left his address, and when she +sent word that Sauvresy was always crying out for him, he hastily +returned. Her letter was most imprudent and absurd, and made his +hair stand on end. He had intended, on his arrival, to reproach +her; but it was she who upbraided him. + +"Why this flight?" + +"I could not stay here--I suffered, trembled, felt as if I were +dying." + +"What a coward you are!" + +He would have replied, but she put her finger on his mouth, and +pointed with her other hand to the door of the next room. + +"Sh! Three doctors have been in consultation there for the past +hour, and I haven't been able to hear a word of what they said. Who +knows what they are about? I shall not be easy till they go away." + +Bertha's fears were not without foundation. When Sauvresy had his +last relapse, and complained of a severe neuralgia in the face and +an irresistible craving for pepper, Dr. R--- had uttered a significant +exclamation. It was nothing, perhaps--yet Bertha had heard it, and +she thought she surprised a sudden suspicion on the doctor's part; +and this now disturbed her, for she thought that it might be the +subject of the consultation. The suspicion, however, if there had +ever been any, quickly vanished. The symptoms entirely changed +twelve hours later, and the next day the sick man felt pains quite +the opposite of those which had previously distressed him. This +very inconstancy of the distemper served to puzzle the doctor's +conclusions. Sauvresy, in these latter days, had scarcely suffered +at all, he said, and had slept well at night; but he had, at times, +strange and often distressing sensations. He was evidently failing +hourly; he was dying--everyone perceived it. And now Dr. R--- asked +for a consultation, the result of which had not been reached when +Tremorel returned. + +The drawing-room door at last swung open, and the calm faces of the +physicians reassured the poisoner. Their conclusions were that the +case was hopeless; everything had been tried and exhausted; no human +resources had been neglected; the only hope was in Sauvresy's strong +constitution. + +Bertha, colder than marble, motionless, her eyes full of tears, +seemed so full of grief on hearing this cruel decision, that all +the doctors were touched. + +"Is there no hope then? Oh, my God!" cried she, in agonizing tones. + +Dr. R--- hardly dared to attempt to comfort her; he answered her +questions evasively. + +"We must never despair," said he, "when the invalid is of Sauvresy's +age and constitution; nature often works miracles when least +expected." + +The doctor, however, lost no time in taking Hector apart and begging +him to prepare the poor, devoted, loving young lady for the terrible +blow about to ensue. + +"For you see," added he, "I don't think Monsieur Sauvresy can live +more than two days!" + +Bertha, with her ear at the keyhole, had heard the doctor's +prediction; and when Hector returned from conducting the physician +to the door, he found her radiant. She rushed into his arms. + +"Now" cried she, "the future truly belongs to us. Only one black +point obscured our horizon, and it has cleared away. It is for me +to realize Doctor R---'s prediction." They dined together, as usual, +in the dining-room, while one of the chambermaids remained beside +the sick-bed. Bertha was full of spirits which she could scarcely +control. The certainty of success and safety, the assurance of +reaching the end, made her imprudently gay. She spoke aloud, even +in the presence of the servants, of her approaching liberty. +During the evening she was more reckless than ever. If any of the +servants should have a suspicion, or a shadow of one she might be +discovered and lost. Hector constantly nudged her under the table +and frowned at her, to keep her quiet; he felt his blood run cold +at her conduct; all in vain. There are times when the armor of +hypocrisy becomes so burdensome that one is forced, cost what it +may, to throw it off if only for an instant. + +While Hector was smoking his cigar, Bertha was more freely pursuing +her dream. She was thinking that she could spend the period of her +mourning at Valfeuillu, and Hector, for the sake of appearances, +would hire a pretty little house somewhere in the suburbs. The +worst of it all was that she would be forced to seem to mourn for +Sauvresy, as she had pretended to love him during his lifetime. +But at last a day would come when, without scandal, she might throw +off her mourning clothes, and then they would get married. Where? +At Paris or Orcival? + +Hector's thoughts ran in the same channel. He, too, wished to see +his friend under the ground to end his own terrors, and to submit +to Bertha's terrible yoke. + + + + +XX + +Time passed. Hector and Bertha repaired to Sauvresy's room; he was +asleep. They noiselessly took chairs beside the fire, as usual, +and the maid retired. In order that the sick man might not be +disturbed by the light of the lamp, curtains had been hung so that, +when lying down, he could not see the fireplace and mantel. In +order to see these, he must have raised himself on his pillow and +leaned forward on his right arm. But now he was asleep, breathing +painfully, feverish, and shuddering convulsively. Bertha and Hector +did not speak; the solemn and sinister silence was only broken by +the ticking of the clock, or by the leaves of the book which Hector +was reading. Ten o'clock struck; soon after Sauvresy moved, turned +over, and awoke. Bertha was at his side in an instant; she saw that +his eyes were open. + +"Do you feel a little better, dear Clement?" she asked. + +"Neither better nor worse." + +"Do you want anything?" + +"I am thirsty." + +Hector, who had raised his eyes when his friend spoke, suddenly +resumed his reading. + +Bertha, standing by the mantel, began to prepare with great care +Dr. R---'s last prescription; when it was ready, she took out the +fatal little vial as usual, and thrust one of her hair-pins into it. + +She had not time to draw it out before she felt a light touch upon +her shoulder. A shudder shook her from head to foot; she suddenly +turned and uttered a loud scream, a cry of terror and horror. + +"Oh!" + +The hand which had touched her was her husband's. While she was +busied with the poison at the mantel, Sauvresy had softly raised +himself; more softly still, he had pulled the curtain aside, and +had stretched out his arm and touched her. His eyes glittered +with hate and anger. + +Bertha's cry was answered by another dull cry, or rather groan; +Tremorel had seen and comprehended all; he was overwhelmed. + +"All is discovered!" Their eyes spoke these three words to each +other. They saw them everywhere, written in letters of fire. There +was a moment of stupor, of silence so profound that Hector heard his +temples beat. Sauvresy had got back under the bed-clothes again. +He laughed loudly, wildly, just as a skeleton might have laughed +whose jaws and teeth rattled together. + +But Bertha was not one of those persons who are overcome by a single +blow, terrible as it might be. She trembled like a leaf; her legs +staggered; but her mind was already at work seeking a subterfuge. +What had Sauvresy seen--anything? What did he know? For even +had he seen the vial, this might be explained. It could only have +been by simple chance that he had touched her at the moment when +she was using the poison. All these thoughts flashed across her +mind in a moment, as rapid as lightning shooting between the clouds. +And then she dared to approach the bed, and, with a frightfully +constrained smile, to say: + +"How you frightened me then!" + +He looked at her a moment, which seemed to her an age--and simply +replied: + +"I understand it." + +There was no longer any uncertainty. Bertha saw only too well in +her husband's eyes that he knew something. But what--how much? +She nerved herself to go on: + +"Are you still suffering?" + +"No." + +"Then why did you get up?" + +He raised himself upon his pillow, and with a sudden strength, he +continued: + +"I got up to tell you that I have had enough of these tortures, +that I have reached the limits of human energy, that I cannot endure +one day longer the agony of seeing myself put to death slowly, drop +by drop, by the hands of my wife and my best friend!" + +He stopped. Hector and Bertha were thunderstruck. "I wanted to +tell you also, that I have had enough of your cruel caution, and +that I suffer. Ah, don't you see that I suffer horribly? Hurry, +cut short my agony! Kill me, and kill me at a blow--poisoners!" + +At the last word, the Count de Tremorel sprang up as if he had +moved by a spring, his eyes haggard, his arms stretched out. +Sauvresy, seeing this, quickly slipped his hand under the pillow, +pulled out a revolver, and pointed the barrel at Hector, crying out: + +"Don't advance a step!" + +He thought that Tremorel, seeing that they were discovered, was +going to rush upon him and strangle him; but he was mistaken. It +seemed to Hector as though he were losing his mind. He fell down +as heavily as if he were a log. Bertha was more self-possessed; +she tried to resist the torpor of terror which she felt coming on. + +"You are worse, my Clement," said she. "This is that dreadful fever +which frightens me so. Delirium--" + +"Have I really been delirious?" interrupted he, with a surprised air. + +"Alas, yes, dear, that is what haunts you, and fills your poor sick +head with horrid visions." + +He looked at her curiously. He was really stupefied by this +boldness, which constantly grew more bold. + +"What! you think that we, who are so dear to you, your friends, I, +your--" + +Her husband's implacable look forced her to stop, and the words +expired on her lips. + +"Enough of these lies, Bertha," resumed Sauvresy, "they are useless. +No, I have not been dreaming, nor have I been delirious. The poison +is only too real, and I could tell you what it is without your +taking it out of your pocket." + +She recoiled as if she had seen her husband's hand stretched out to +snatch the blue vial. + +"I guessed it and recognized it at the very first; for you have +chosen one of those poisons which, it is true, leave scarcely any +trace of themselves, but the symptoms of which are not deceptive. +Do you remember the day when I complained of a morbid taste for +pepper? The next day I was certain of it, and I was not the only +one. Doctor R---, too, had a suspicion." + +Bertha tried to stammer something; her husband interrupted her. + +"People ought to try their poisons," pursued he, in an ironical +tone, "before they use them. Didn't you understand yours, or what +its effects were? Why, your poison gives intolerable neuralgia, +sleeplessness, and you saw me without surprise, sleeping soundly +all night long! I complained of a devouring fire within me, while +your poison freezes the blood and the entrails, and yet you are not +astonished. You see all the symptoms change and disappear, and +that does not enlighten you. You are fools, then. Now see what +I had to do to divert Doctor R---'s suspicions. I hid the real pains +which your poison caused, and complained of imaginary, ridiculous +ones. I described sensations just the opposite of those which I +felt. You were lost, then--and I saved you." + +Bertha's malignant energy staggered beneath so many successive blows. +She wondered whether she were not going mad; had she heard aright? +Was it really true that her husband had perceived that he was being +poisoned, and yet said nothing; nay, that he had even deceived the +doctor? Why? What was his purpose? + +Sauvresy paused several minutes, and then went on: + +"I have held my tongue and so saved you, because the sacrifice of +my life had already been made. Yes, I had been fatally wounded in +the heart on the day that I learned that you were faithless to me." + +He spoke of his death without apparent emotion; but at the words, +"You were faithless to me," his voice faltered and trembled. + +"I would not, could not believe it at first. I doubted the evidence +of my senses, rather than doubt you. But I was forced to believe at +last. I was no longer anything in my house but a laughing-stock. +But I was in your way. You and your lover needed more room and +liberty. You were tired of constraint and hypocrisy. Then it was +that, believing that my death would make you free and rich, you +brought in poison to rid yourselves of me." + +Bertha had at least the heroism of crime. All was discovered; well, +she threw down the mask. She tried to defend her accomplice, who +lay unconscious in a chair. + +"It is I that have done it all," cried she. "He is innocent." + +Sauvresy turned pale with rage. + +"Ah, really," said he, "my friend Hector is innocent! It wasn't he, +then, who, to pay me up--not for his life, for he was too cowardly +to kill himself; but for his honor, which he owes to me--took my +wife from me? Wretch! I hold out my hand to him when he is +drowning, I welcome him like a brother, and in return, he desolates +my hearth! . . . And you knew what you were doing, my friend Hector-- +for I told you a hundred times that my wife was my all here below, +my present and my future, my dream and happiness and hope and very +life! You knew that for me to lose her was to die. But if you had +loved her--no, it was not that you loved her; you hated me. Envy +devoured you, and you could not tell me to my face, 'You are too +happy.' Then, like a coward, you dishonored me in the dark. Bertha +was only the instrument of your rancor; and she weighs upon you +to-day--you despise and fear her. My friend, Hector, you have been +in this house the vile lackey who thinks to avenge his baseness by +spitting upon the meats which he puts on his master's table!" + +The count only responded by a shudder. The dying man's terrible +words fell more cruelly on his conscience than blows upon his cheek. + +"See, Bertha," continued Sauvresy, "that's the man whom you have +preferred to me, and for whom you have betrayed me. You never +loved me--I see it now--your heart was never Mine. And I--I +loved you so! From the day I first saw you, you were my only +thought; as if your heart had beaten in place of Mine. Everything +about you was dear and precious to me; I adored your whims, +caprices, even your faults. There was nothing I would not do for +a smile from you, so that you would say to me, Thank you, between +two kisses. You don't know that for years after our marriage it +was my delight to wake up first so as to gaze upon you as you lay +asleep, to admire and touch your lovely hair, lying dishevelled +across the pillow. Bertha!" + +He softened at the remembrance of these past joys, which would not +come again. He forgot their presence, the infamous treachery, the +poison; that he was about to die, murdered by this beloved wife; +and his eyes filled with tears, his voice choked. + +Bertha, more motionless and pallid than marble, listened to him +breathlessly. + +"It is true, then," continued the sick man, "that these lovely eyes +conceal a soul of filth! Ah, who would not have been deceived, as +I was? Bertha, what did you dream of when you were sleeping in my +arms? Tremorel came, and you thought you saw in him the ideal of +your dreams. You admired the precocious wrinkles which betrayed an +exhausted life, like the fatal seal which marks the fallen +archangel's forehead. Your love, without thought of mine, rushed +toward him, though he did not think of you. You went to evil as if +it were your nature. And yet I thought you more immaculate than +the Alpine snows. You did not even have a struggle with yourself; +you betrayed no confusion which would reveal your first fault to +me. You brought me your forehead soiled with his kisses without +blushing." + +Weariness overcame his energies; his voice became little by little +feebler and less distinct. + +"You had your happiness in your hands, Bertha, and you carelessly +destroyed it, as the child breaks the toy of whose value he is +ignorant. What did you expect from this wretch for whom you had +the frightful courage to kill me, with a kiss upon your lips, +slowly, hour by hour? You thought you loved him, but disgust +ought to have come at last. Look at him, and judge between us. +See which is the--man--I, extended on this bed where I shall +soon die, or he shivering there in a corner. You have the energy +of crime, but he has only the baseness of it. Ah, if my name was +Hector de Tremorel, and a man had spoken as I have just done, +that man should live no longer, even if he had ten revolvers like +this I am holding to defend himself with!" + +Hector, thus taunted, tried to get up and reply; but his legs would +not support him, and his throat only gave hoarse, unintelligible +sounds. Bertha, as she looked at the two men, recognized her error +with rage and indignation. Her husband, at this moment, seemed to +her sublime; his eyes gleamed, his face was radiant; while the other-- +the other! She felt sick with disgust when she but glanced +toward him. + +Thus all these deceptive chimeras after which she had run, love, +passion, poetry, were already hers; she had held them in her hands +and she had not been able to perceive it. But what was Sauvresy's +purpose? + +He continued, painfully: + +"This then, is our situation; you have killed me, you are going to +be free, yet you hate and despise each other--" + +He stopped, and seemed to be suffocating; he tried to raise himself +on his pillow and to sit up in bed, but found himself too feeble. + +"Bertha," said he, "help me get up." + +She leaned over the bed, and taking her husband in her arms, +succeeded in placing him as he wished. He appeared more at ease +in his new position, and took two or three long breaths. + +"Now," he said, "I should like something to drink. The doctor lets +me take a little old wine, if I have a fancy for it; give me some." + +She hastened to bring him a glass of wine, which he emptied and +handed back to her. + +"There wasn't any poison in it, was there?" he asked. + +This ghastly question and the smile which accompanied it, melted +Bertha's callousness; remorse had already taken possession of her, +as her disgust of Tremorel increased. + +"Poison?" she cried, eagerly, "never!" + +"You must give me some, though, presently, so as to help me to die." + +"You die, Clement? No; I want you to live, so that I may redeem +the past. I am a wretch, and have committed a hideous crime--but +you are good. You will live; I don't ask to be your wife, but +only your servant. I will love you, humiliate myself, serve you +on my knees, so that some day, after ten, twenty years of expiation, +you will forgive me!" + +Hector in his mortal terror and anguish, was scarcely able to +distinguish what was taking place. But he saw a dim ray of hope +in Bertha's gestures and accent, and especially in her last words; +he thought that perhaps it was all going to end and be forgotten, +and that Sauvresy would pardon them. Half-rising, he stammered: + +"Yes, forgive us, forgive us!" + +Sauvresy's eyes glittered, and his angry voice vibrated as if it +came from a throat of metal. + +"Forgive!" cried he, "pardon! Did you have pity on me during all +this year that you have been playing with my happiness, during this +fortnight that you have been mixing poison in all my potions? +Pardon? What, are you fools? Why do you think I held my tongue, +when I discovered your infamy, and let myself be poisoned, and +threw the doctors off the scent? Do you really hope that I did +this to prepare a scene of heartrending farewells, and to give +you my benediction at the end? Ah, know me better!" + +Bertha was sobbing; she tried to take her husband's hand, but he +rudely repulsed her. + +"Enough of these falsehoods," said he. "Enough of these perfidies. +I hate you! You don't seem to perceive that hate is all that is +still living in me." + +Sauvresy's expression was at this moment ferocious. "It is almost +two months since I learned the truth; it broke me up, soul and body. +Ah, it cost me a good deal to keep quiet--it almost killed me. +But one thought sustained me; I longed to avenge myself. My mind +was always bent on that; I searched for a punishment as great as +this crime; I found none, could find none. Then you resolved to +poison me. Mark this--that the very day when I guessed about the +poison I had a thrill of joy, for I had discovered my vengeance!" + +A constantly increasing terror possessed Bertha, and now stupefied +her, as well as Tremorel. + +"Why do you wish for my death? To be free and marry each other? +Very well; I wish that also. The Count de Tremorel will be Madame +Sauvresy's second husband." + +"Never!" cried Bertha. "No, never!" + +"Never!" echoed Hector. + +"It shall be so; nevertheless because I wish it. Oh, my precautions +have been well taken, and you can't escape me. Now hear me. When +I became certain that I was being poisoned, I began to write a +minute history of all three of us; I did more--I have kept a +journal day by day and hour by hour, narrating all the particulars +of my illness; then I kept some of the poison which you gave me--" + +Bertha made a gesture of denial. Sauvresy proceeded: + +"Certainly, I kept it, and I will tell you how. Every time that +Bertha gave me a suspicious potion, I kept a portion of it in my +mouth, and carefully ejected it into a bottle which I kept hid +under the bolster. Ah, you ask how I could have done all this +without your suspecting it, or without being seen by any of the +servants. Know that hate is stronger than love, be sure that I +have left nothing to chance, nor have I forgotten anything." + +Hector and Bertha looked at Sauvresy with a dull, fixed gaze. They +forced themselves to understand him, but could scarcely do so. + +"Let's finish," resumed the dying man, "my strength is waning. +This very morning, the bottle containing the poison I have preserved, +our biographies, and the narrative of my poisoning, have been put +in the hands of a trustworthy and devoted person, whom, even if +you knew him, you could not corrupt. He does not know the +contents of what has been confided to him. The day that you get +married this friend will give them all up to you. If, however, +you are not married in a year from to-day, he has instructions to +put these papers and this bottle into the hands of the officers of +the law." + +A double cry of horror and anguish told Sauvresy that he had well +chosen his vengeance. + +"And reflect," added he, "that this package once delivered up to +justice, means the galleys, if not the scaffold for both of you." + +Sauvresy had overtasked his strength. He fell panting upon the +bed, his mouth open, his eyes filmy, and his features so distorted +that he seemed to be on the point of death. But neither Bertha +nor Tremorel thought of trying to relieve him. They remained +opposite each other with dilated eyes, stupefied, as if their +thoughts were bent upon the torments of that future which the +implacable vengeance of the man whom they had outraged imposed +upon them. They were indissolubly united, confounded in a common +destiny; nothing could separate them but death. A chain stronger +and harder than that of the galley-slave bound them together; a +chain of infamies and crimes, of which the first link was a kiss, +and the last a murder by poison. Now Sauvresy might die; his +vengeance was on their heads, casting a cloud upon their sun. Free +in appearance, they would go through life crushed by the burden of +the past, more slaves than the blacks in the American rice-fields. +Separated by mutual hate and contempt, they saw themselves riveted +together by the common terror of punishment, condemned to an +eternal embrace. + +Bertha at this moment admired her husband. Now that he was so +feeble that he breathed as painfully as an infant, she looked upon +him as something superhuman. She had had no idea of such +constancy and courage allied with so much dissimulation and genius. +How cunningly he had found them out! How well he had known how to +avenge himself! To be the master, he had only to will it. In a +certain way she rejoiced in the strange atrocity of this scene; she +felt something like a bitter pride in being one of the actors in it. +At the same time she was transported with rage and sorrow in +thinking that she had had this man in her power, that he had been +at her feet. She almost loved him. Of all men, it was he whom she +would have chosen were she mistress of her destinies; and he was +going to escape her. + +Tremorel, while these strange ideas crowded upon Bertha's mind, +began to come to himself. The certainty that Laurence was now +forever lost for him occurred to him, and his despair was without +bounds. The silence continued a full quarter of an hour. Sauvresy +at last subdued the spasm which had exhausted him, and spoke. + +"I have not said all yet," he commenced. + +His voice was as feeble as a murmur, and yet it seemed terrible to +his hearers. + +"You shall see whether I have reckoned and foreseen well. Perhaps, +when I was dead, the idea of flying and going abroad would strike +you. I shall not permit that. You must stay at Orcival--at +Valfeuillu. A--friend--not he with the package--is charged, +without knowing the reason for it, with the task of watching you. +Mark well what I say--if either of you should disappear for eight +days, on the ninth, the man who has the package would receive a +letter which would cause him to resort at once to the police." + +Yes, he had foreseen all, and Tremorel, who had already thought of +flight, was overwhelmed. + +"I have so arranged, besides, that the idea of flight shall not +tempt you too much. It is true I have left all my fortune to +Bertha, but I only give her the use of it; the property itself will +not be hers until the day after your marriage." + +Bertha made a gesture of repugnance which her husband misinterpreted. + +"You are thinking of the copy of my will which is in your possession. +It is a useless one, and I only added to it some valueless words +because I wanted to put your suspicions to sleep. My true will is +in the notary's hands, and bears a date two days later. I can read +you the rough draft of it." + +He took a sheet of paper from a portfolio which was concealed; like +the revolver, under the bolster, and read: + +"Being stricken with a fatal malady, I here set down freely, and +in the fulness of my faculties, my last wishes: + +"My dearest wish is that my well-beloved widow, Bertha, should +espouse, as soon as the delay enjoined by law has expired, my +dear friend, the Count Hector de Tremorel. Having appreciated the +grandeur of soul and nobleness of sentiment which belong to my +wife and friend, I know that they are worthy of each other, and +that each will be happy in the other. I die the more peacefully, +as I leave my Bertha to a protector whose--" + +It was impossible for Bertha to hear more. + +"For pity's sake," cried she, "enough." + +"Enough? Well, let it be so," responded Sauvresy. "I have read +this paper to you to show you that while I have arranged everything +to insure the execution of my will; I have also done all that can +preserve to you the world's respect. Yes, I wish that you should +be esteemed and honored, for it is you alone upon whom I rely for +my vengeance. I have knit around you a net-work which you can +never burst asunder. You triumph; my tombstone shall be, as you +hoped, the altar of your nuptials, or else--the galleys." + +Tremorel's pride at last revolted against so many humiliations, so +many whip-strokes lashing his face. + +"You have only forgotten one thing, Sauvresy; that a man can die." + +"Pardon me," replied the sick man, coldly. "I have foreseen that +also, and was just going to tell you so. Should one of you die +suddenly before the marriage, the police will be called in." + +"You misunderstood me; I meant that a man can kill himself." + +"You kill yourself? Humph! Jenny, who disdains you almost as much +as I do, has told me about your threats to kill yourself. You! +See here; here is my revolver; shoot yourself, and I will forgive +my wife!" + +Hector made a gesture of anger, but did not take the pistol. + +"You see," said Sauvresy, "I knew it well. You are afraid." +Turning to Bertha, he added, "This is your lover." + +Extraordinary situations like this are so unwonted and strange +that the actors in them almost always remain composed and natural, +as if stupefied. Bertha, Hector, and Sauvresy accepted, without +taking note of it, the strange position in which they found +themselves; and they talked naturally, as if of matters of +every-day life, and not of terrible events. But the hours flew, +and Sauvresy perceived his life to be ebbing from him. + +"There only remains one more act to play," said he. "Hector, go +and call the servants, have those who have gone to bed aroused, I +want to see them before dying." + +Tremorel hesitated. + +"Come, go along; or shall I ring, or fire a pistol to bring them +here?" + +Hector went out; Bertha remained alone with her husband--alone! +She had a hope that perhaps she might succeed in making him change +his purpose, and that she might obtain his forgiveness. She knelt +beside the bed. Never had she been so beautiful, so seductive, so +irresistible. The keen emotions of the evening had brought her +whole soul into her face, and her lovely eyes supplicated, her +breast heaved, her mouth was held out as if for a kiss, and her +new-born passion for Sauvresy burst out into delirium. + +"Clement," she stammered, in a voice full of tenderness, "my +husband, Clement!" + +He directed toward her a glance of hatred. + +"What do you wish?" + +She did not know how to begin--she hesitated, trembled and sobbed. + +"Hector would not kill himself," said she, "but I--" + +"Well, what do you wish to say? Speak!" + +"It was I, a wretch, who have killed you. I will not survive you." + +An inexpressible anguish distorted Sauvresy's features. She kill +herself! If so, his vengeance was vain; his own death would then +appear only ridiculous and absurd. And he knew that Bertha would +not be wanting in courage at the critical moment. + +She waited, while he reflected. + +"You are free," said he, at last, "this would merely be a sacrifice +to Hector. If you died, he would marry Laurence Courtois, and in +a year would forget even our name." + +Bertha sprang to her feet; she pictured Hector to herself married +and happy. A triumphant smile, like a sun's ray, brightened +Sauvresy's pale face. He had touched the right chord. He might +sleep in peace as to his vengeance. Bertha would live. He knew +how hateful to each other were these enemies whom he left linked +together. + +The servants came in one by one; nearly all of them had been long +in Sauvresy's service, and they loved him as a good master. They +wept and groaned to see him lying there so pale and haggard, with +the stamp of death already on his forehead. Sauvresy spoke to +them in a feeble voice, which was occasionally interrupted by +distressing hiccoughs. He thanked them, he said, for their +attachment and fidelity, and wished to apprise them that he had +left each of them a goodly sum in his will. Then turning to Bertha +and Hector, he resumed: + +"You have witnessed, my people, the care and solicitude with which +my bedside has been surrounded by this incomparable friend and my +adored Bertha. You have seen their devotion. Alas, I know how +keen their sorrow will be! But if they wish to soothe my last +moments and give me a happy death, they will assent to the prayer +which I earnestly make, to them, and will swear to espouse each +other after I am gone. Oh, my beloved friends, this seems cruel +to you now; but you know not how all human pain is dulled in me. +You are young, life has yet much happiness in store for you. I +conjure you yield to a dying man's entreaties!" + +They approached the bed, and Sauvresy put Bertha's hand into +Hector's. + +"Do you swear to obey me?" asked he. + +They shuddered to hold each other's hands, and seemed near +fainting; but they answered, and were heard to murmur: + +"We swear it." + +The servants retired, grieved at this distressing scene, and +Bertha muttered: + +"Oh, 'tis infamous, 'tis horrible!" + +"Infamous--yes," returned Sauvresy, "but not more so than your +caresses, Bertha, or than your hand-pressures, Hector; not more +horrible than your plans, than your hopes--" + +His voice sank into a rattle. Soon the agony commenced. Horrible +convulsions distorted his limbs; twice or thrice he cried out: + +"I am cold; I am cold!" + +His body was indeed stiff, and nothing could warm it. + +Despair filled the house, for a death so sudden was not looked for. +The domestics came and went, whispering to each other, "He is going, +poor monsieur; poor madame!" + +Soon the convulsions ceased. He lay extended on his back, breathing +so feebly that twice they thought his breath had ceased forever. At +last, a little before ten o'clock, his cheeks suddenly colored and +he shuddered. He rose, up in bed, his eye staring, his arm +stretched out toward the window, and he cried: + +"There--behind the curtain--I see them--I see them!" + +A last convulsion stretched him again on his pillow. + +Clement Sauvresy was dead! + + + + +XXI + +The old justice of the peace ceased reading his voluminous record. +His hearers, the detective and the doctor remained silent under the +influence of this distressing narrative. M. Plantat had read it +impressively, throwing himself into the recital as if he had been +personally an actor in the scenes described. + +M. Lecoq was the first to recover himself. + +"A strange man, Sauvresy," said he. + +It was Sauvresy's extraordinary idea of vengeance which struck him +in the story. He admired his "good playing" in a drama in which +he knew he was going to yield up his life. + +"I don't know many people," pursued the detective, "capable of so +fearful a firmness. To let himself be poisoned so slowly and +gently by his wife! Brrr! It makes a man shiver all over!" + +"He knew how to avenge himself," muttered the doctor. + +"Yes," answered M. Plantat, "yes, Doctor; he knew how to avenge +himself, and more terribly than he supposed, or than you can imagine." + +The detective rose from his seat. He had remained motionless, +glued to his chair for more than three hours, and his legs were +benumbed. + +"For my part," said he, "I can very well conceive what an infernal +existence the murderers began to suffer the day after their victim's +death. You have depicted them, Monsieur Plantat, with the hand of +a master. I know them as well after your description as if I had +studied them face to face for ten years." + +He spoke deliberately, and watched for the effect of what he said +in M. Plantat's countenance. + +"Where on earth did this old fellow get all these details?" he +asked himself. "Did he write this narrative, and if not, who did? +How was it, if he had all this information, that he has said +nothing?" + +M. Plantat appeared to be unconscious of the detective's searching +look. + +"I know that Sauvresy's body was not cold," said he, "before his +murderers began to threaten each other with death." + +"Unhappily for them," observed Dr. Gendron, "Sauvresy had foreseen +the probability of his widow's using up the rest of the vial of +poison." + +"Ah, he was shrewd," said M. Lecoq, in a tone of conviction, +"very shrewd." + +"Bertha could not pardon Hector," continued M. Plantat, "for +refusing to take the revolver and blow his brains out; Sauvresy, +you see, had foreseen that. Bertha thought that if her lover were +dead, her husband would have forgotten all; and it is impossible to +tell whether she was mistaken or not." + +"And nobody knew anything of this horrible struggle that was going +on in the house?" + +"No one ever suspected anything." + +"It's marvellous!" + +"Say, Monsieur Lecoq, that is scarcely credible. Never was +dissimulation so crafty, and above all, so wonderfully sustained. +If you should question the first person you met in Orcival, he +would tell you, as our worthy Courtois this morning told Monsieur +Domini, that the count and countess were a model pair and adored +each other. Why I, who knew--or suspected, I should say--what +had passed, was deceived myself." + +Promptly as M. Plantat had corrected himself, his slip of the +tongue did not escape M. Lecoq. + +"Was it really a slip, or not?" he asked himself. + +"These wretches have been terribly punished," pursued M. Plantat, +"and it is impossible to pity them; all would have gone rightly if +Sauvresy, intoxicated by his hatred, had not committed a blunder +which was almost a crime." + +"A crime!" exclaimed the doctor. + +M. Lecoq smiled and muttered in a low tone: + +"Laurence." + +But low as he had spoken, M. Plantat heard him. + +"Yes, Monsieur Lecoq," said he severely. "Yes, Laurence. Sauvresy +did a detestable thing when he thought of making this poor girl the +accomplice, or I should say, the instrument of his wrath. He +piteously threw her between these two wretches, without asking +himself whether she would be broken. It was by using Laurence's +name that he persuaded Bertha not to kill herself. Yet he knew of +Tremorel's passion for her, he knew her love for him, and he knew +that his friend was capable of anything. He, who had so well +foreseen all that could serve his vengeance, did not deign to +foresee that Laurence might be dishonored; and yet he left her +disarmed before this most cowardly and infamous of men!" + +The detective reflected. + +"There is one thing," said he, "that I can't explain. Why was it +that these two, who execrated each other, and whom the implacable +will of their victim chained together despite themselves, did not +separate of one accord the day after their marriage, when they had +fulfilled the condition which had established their crime?" + +The old justice of the peace shook his head. + +"I see," he answered, "that I have not yet made you understand +Bertha's resolute character. Hector would have been delighted with +a separation; his wife could not consent to it. Ah, Sauvresy knew +her well! She saw her life ruined, a horrible remorse lacerated +her; she must have a victim upon whom to expiate her errors and +crimes; this victim was Hector. Ravenous for her prey, she would +not let him go for anything in the world." + +"I' faith," observed Dr. Gendron, "your Tremorel was a +chicken-hearted wretch. What had he to fear when Sauvresy's +manuscript was once destroyed?" + +"Who told you it had been destroyed?" interrupted M. Plantat. + +M. Lecoq at this stopped promenading up and down the room, and sat +down opposite M. Plantat. + +"The whole case lies there," said he, "Whether these proofs have +or have not been destroyed." + +M. Plantat did not choose to answer directly. + +"Do you know," asked he, "to whom Sauvresy confided them for +keeping?" + +"Ah," cried the detective, as if a sudden idea had enlightened him, +"it was you." + +He added to himself, "Now, my good man, I begin to see where all +your information comes from." + +"Yes, it was I," resumed M. Plantat. "On the day of the marriage +of Madame Sauvresy and Count Hector, in conformity with the last +wishes of my dying friend, I went to Valfeuillu and asked to see +Monsieur and Madame de Tremorel. Although they were full of +company, they received me at once in the little room on the +ground-floor where Sauvresy was murdered. They were both very pale +and terribly troubled. They evidently guessed the purpose of my +visit, for they lost no time in admitting me to an interview. After +saluting them I addressed myself to Bertha, being enjoined to do so +by the written instructions I had received; this was another +instance of Sauvresy's foresight. 'Madame,' said I, 'I was charged +by your late husband to hand to you, on the day of your second +marriage, this package, which he confided to my care.' She took the +package, in which the bottle and the manuscript were enclosed, +with a smiling, even joyous air, thanked me warmly, and went out. +The count's expression instantly changed; he appeared very restless +and agitated; he seemed to be on coals. I saw well enough that he +burned to rush after his wife, but dared not; I was going to retire; +but he stopped me. 'Pardon me,' said he, abruptly, 'you will permit +me, will you not? I will return immediately,' with which he ran +out. When I saw him and his wife a few minutes afterward, they +were both very red; their eyes had a strange expression and their +voices trembled, as they accompanied me to the door. They had +certainly been having a violent altercation." + +"The rest may be conjectured," interrupted M. Lecoq. "She had gone +to secrete the manuscript in some safe place; and when her new +husband asked her to give it up to him, she replied, 'Look for it.'" + +"Sauvresy had enjoined on me to give it only into her hands." + +"Oh, he knew how to work his revenge. He had it given to his wife +so that she might hold a terrible arm against Tremorel, all ready +to crush him. If he revolted, she always had this instrument of +torture at hand. Ah, the man was a miserable wretch, and she must +have made him suffer terribly." + +"Yes," said Dr. Gendron, "up to the very day he killed her." + +The detective had resumed his promenade up and down the library. + +"The question as to the poison," said he, "remains. It is a simple +one to resolve, because we've got the man who sold it to her in +that closet." + +"Besides," returned the doctor, "I can tell something about the +poison. This rascal of a Robelot stole it from my laboratory, and +I know only too well what it is, even if the symptoms, so well +described by our friend Plantat, had not indicated its name to me. +I was at work upon aconite when Sauvresy died; and he was poisoned +with aconitine." + +"Ah, with aconitine," said M. Lecoq, surprised. "It's the first +time that I ever met with that poison. Is it a new thing?" + +"Not exactly. Medea is said to have extracted her deadliest poisons +from aconite, and it was employed in Rome and Greece in criminal +executions." + +"And I did not know of it! But I have very little time to study. +Besides, this poison of Medea's was perhaps lost, as was that of +the Borgias; so many of these things are!" + +"No, it was not lost, be assured. But we only know of it nowadays +by Mathiole's experiments on felons sentenced to death, in the +sixteenth century; by Hers, who isolated the active principle, the +alkaloid, in 1833 and lastly by certain experiments made by +Bouchardat, who pretends--" + +Unfortunately, when Dr. Gendron was set agoing on poisons, it was +difficult to stop him; but M. Lecoq, on the other hand, never lost +sight of the end he had in view. + +"Pardon me for interrupting you, Doctor," said he. "But would +traces of aconitine be found in a body which had been two years +buried? For Monsieur Domini is going to order the exhumation of +Sauvresy." + +"The tests of aconitine are not sufficiently well known to permit +of the isolation of it in a body. Bouchardat tried ioduret of +potassium, but his experiment was not successful." + +"The deuce!" said M. Lecoq. "That's annoying." + +The doctor smiled benignly. + +"Reassure yourself," said he. "No such process was in existence-- +so I invented one." + +"Ah," cried Plantat. "Your sensitive paper!" + +"Precisely." + +"And could you find aconitine in Sauvresy's body?" + +"Undoubtedly." + +M. Lecoq was radiant, as if he were now certain of fulfilling what +had seemed to him a very difficult task. + +"Very well," said he. "Our inquest seems to be complete. The +history of the victims imparted to us by Monsieur Plantat gives us +the key to all the events which have followed the unhappy Sauvresy's +death. Thus, the hatred of this pair, who were in appearance so +united, is explained; and it is also clear why Hector has ruined a +charming young girl with a splendid dowry, instead of making her his +wife. There is nothing surprising in Tremorel's casting aside his +name and personality to reappear under another guise; he killed his +wife because he was constrained to do so by the logic of events. He +could not fly while she was alive, and yet he could not continue to +live at Valfeuillu. And above all, the paper for which he searched +with such desperation, when every moment was an affair of life and +death to him, was none other than Sauvresy's manuscript, his +condemnation and the proof of his first crime." + +M. Lecoq talked eagerly, as if he had a personal animosity against +the Count de Tremorel; such was his nature; and he always avowed +laughingly that he could not help having a grudge against the +criminals whom he pursued. There was an account to settle between +him and them; hence the ardor of his pursuit. Perhaps it was a +simple matter of instinct with him, like that which impels the +hunting hound on the track of his game. + +"It is clear enough now," he went on, "that it was Mademoiselle +Courtois who put an end to his hesitation and eternal delay. His +passion for her, irritated by obstacles, goaded him to delirium. +On learning her condition, he lost his head and forgot all prudence +and reason. He was wearied, too, of a punishment which began anew +each morning; he saw himself lost, and his wife sacrificing herself +for the malignant pleasure of sacrificing him. Terrified, he took +the resolution to commit this murder." + +Many of the circumstances which had established M. Lecoq's +conviction had escaped Dr. Gendron. + +"What!" cried he, stupefied. "Do you believe in Mademoiselle +Laurence's complicity?" + +The detective earnestly protested by a gesture. + +"No, Doctor, certainly not; heaven forbid that I should have such +an idea. Mademoiselle Courtois was and is still ignorant of this +crime. But she knew that Tremorel would abandon his wife for her. +This flight had been discussed, planned, and agreed upon between +them; they made an appointment to meet at a certain place, on a +certain day." + +"But this letter," said the doctor. + +M. Plantat could scarcely conceal his emotion whet Laurence was +being talked about. + +"This letter," cried he, "which has plunged her family into the +deepest grief, and which will perhaps kill poor Courtois, is only +one more scene of the infamous drama which the count has planned." + +"Oh," said the doctor, "is it possible?" + +"I am firmly of Monsieur Plantat's opinion," said the detective. +"Last evening we had the same suspicion at the same moment at the +mayor's. I read and re-read her letter, and could have sworn that +it did not emanate from herself. The count gave her a rough draft +from which she copied it. We mustn't deceive ourselves; this letter +was meditated, pondered on, and composed at leisure. Those were not +the expressions of an unhappy young girl of twenty who was going to +kill herself to escape dishonor." + +"Perhaps you are right," remarked the doctor visibly moved. "But +how can you imagine that Tremorel succeeded in persuading her to +do this wretched act?" + +"How? See here, Doctor, I am not much experienced in such things, +having seldom had occasion to study the characters of well-brought-up +young girls; yet it seems to me very simple. Mademoiselle Courtois +saw the time coming when her disgrace would be public, and so +prepared for it, and was even ready to die if necessary." + +M. Plantat shuddered; a conversation which he had had with Laurence +occurred to him. She had asked him, he remembered, about certain +poisonous plants which he was cultivating, and had been anxious to +know how the poisonous juices could be extracted from them. + +"Yes," said he, "she has thought of dying." + +"Well," resumed the detective, "the count took her in one of the +moods when these sad thoughts haunted the poor girl, and was easily +able to complete his work of ruin. She undoubtedly told him that +she preferred death to shame, and he proved to her that, being in +the condition in which she was, she had no right to kill herself. +He said that he was very unhappy; and that not being free, he could +not repair his fault; but he offered to sacrifice his life for her. +What should she do to save both of them? Abandon her parents, make +them believe that she had committed suicide, while he, on his side, +would desert his house and his wife. Doubtless she resisted for +awhile; but she finally consented to everything; she fled, and +copied and posted the infamous letter dictated by her lover." + +The doctor was convinced. + +"Yes," he muttered, "those are doubtless the means he employed." + +"But what an idiot he was," resumed M. Lecoq, "not to perceive that +the strange coincidence between his disappearance and Laurence's +suicide would be remarked! He said to himself, 'Probably people +will think that I, as well as my wife, have been murdered; and the +law, having its victim in Guespin, will not look for any other.'" + +M. Plantat made a gesture of impotent rage. + +"Ah," cried he, "and we know not where the wretch has hid himself +and Laurence." + +The detective took him by the arm and pressed it. + +"Reassure yourself," said he, coolly. "We'll find him, or my name's +not Lecoq; and to be honest, I must say that our task does not seem +to me a difficult one." + +Several timid knocks at the door interrupted the speaker. It was +late, and the household was already awake and about. Mme. Petit +in her anxiety and curiosity had put her ear to the key-hole at +least ten times, but in vain. + +"What can they be up to in there?" said she to Louis. "Here they've +been shut up these twelve hours without eating or drinking. At all +events I'll get breakfast." + +It was not Mme. Petit, however, who dared to knock on the door; but +Louis, the gardener, who came to tell his master of the ravages +which had been made in his flower-pots and shrubs. At the same time +he brought in certain singular articles which he had picked up on +the sward, and which M. Lecoq recognized at once. + +"Heavens!" cried he, "I forgot myself. Here I go on quietly +talking with my face exposed, as if it was not broad daylight; and +people might come in at any moment!" And turning to Louis, who was +very much surprised to see this dark young man whom he had certainly +not admitted the night before, he added: + +"Give me those little toilet articles, my good fellow; they belong +to me." + +Then, by a turn of his hand, he readjusted his physiognomy of last +night, while the master of the house went out to give some orders, +which M. Lecoq did so deftly, that when M. Plantat returned, he +could scarcely believe his eyes. + +They sat down to breakfast and ate their meal as silently as they +had done the dinner of the evening before, losing no time about it. +They appreciated the value of the passing moments; M. Domini was +waiting for them at Corbeil, and was doubtless getting impatient at +their delay. + +Louis had just placed a sumptuous dish of fruit upon the table, +when it occurred to M. Lecoq that Robelot was still shut up in the +closet. + +"Probably the rascal needs something," said he. + +M. Plantat wished to send his servant to him; but M. Lecoq objected. + +"He's a dangerous rogue," said he. "I'll go myself." + +He went out, but almost instantly his voice was heard: + +"Messieurs! Messieurs, see here!" + +The doctor and M. Plantat hastened into the library. + +Across the threshold of the closet was stretched the body of the +bone-setter. He had killed himself. + + + + +XXII + +Robelot must have had rare presence of mind and courage to kill +himself in that obscure closet, without making enough noise to +arouse the attention of those in the library. He had wound a +string tightly around his neck, and had used a piece of pencil as +a twister, and so had strangled himself. He did not, however, +betray the hideous look which the popular belief attributes to +those who have died by strangulation. His face was pale, his eyes +and mouth half open, and he had the appearance of one who has +gradually and without much pain lost his consciousness by congestion +of the brain. + +"Perhaps he is not quite dead yet," said the doctor. He quickly +pulled out his case of instruments and knelt beside the motionless +body. + +This incident seemed to annoy M. Lecoq very much; just as everything +was, as he said, "running on wheels," his principal witness, whom he +had caught at the peril of his life, had escaped him. M. Plantat, +on the contrary, seemed tolerably well satisfied, as if the death +of Robelot furthered projects which he was secretly nourishing, and +fulfilled his secret hopes. Besides, it little mattered if the +object was to oppose M. Domini's theories and induce him to change +his opinion. This corpse had more eloquence in it than the most +explicit of confessions. + +The doctor, seeing the uselessness of his pains, got up. + +"It's all over," said he. "The asphyxia was accomplished in a very +few moments." + +The bone-setter's body was carefully laid on the floor in the +library. + +"There is nothing more to be done," said M. Plantat, "but to carry +him home; we will follow on so as to seal up his effects, which +perhaps contain important papers. Run to the mairie," he added, +turning to his servant, "and get a litter and two stout men." + +Dr. Gendron's presence being no longer necessary, he promised M. +Plantat to rejoin him at Robelot's, and started off to inquire +after M. Courtois's condition. + +Louis lost no time, and soon reappeared followed, not by two, but +ten men. The body was placed on a litter and carried away. Robelot +occupied a little house of three rooms, where he lived by himself; +one of the rooms served as a shop, and was full of plants, dried +herbs, grain, and other articles appertaining to his vocation as +an herbist. He slept in the back room, which was better furnished +than most country rooms. His body was placed upon the bed. Among +the men who had brought it was the "drummer of the town," who was +at the same time the grave-digger. This man, expert in everything +pertaining to funerals, gave all the necessary instructions on the +present occasion, himself taking part in the lugubrious task. + +Meanwhile M. Plantat examined the furniture, the keys of which had +been taken from the deceased's pocket. The value of the property +found in the possession of this man, who had, two years before, +lived from day to day on what he could pick up, were an +over-whelming proof against him in addition to the others already +discovered. But M. Plantat looked in vain for any new indications +of which he was ignorant. He found deeds of the Morin property and +of the Frapesle and Peyron lands; there were also two bonds, for +one hundred and fifty and eight hundred and twenty francs, signed +by two Orcival citizens in Robelot's favor. M. Plantat could +scarcely conceal his disappointment. + +"Nothing of importance," whispered he in M. Lecoq's ear. "How do +you explain that?" + +"Perfectly," responded the detective. "He was a sly rogue, this +Robelot, and he was cunning enough to conceal his sudden fortune +and patient enough to appear to be years accumulating it. You only +find in his secretary effects which he thought he could avow +without danger. How much is there in all?" + +Plantat rapidly added up the different sums, and said: + +"About fourteen thousand five hundred francs." + +"Madame Sauvresy gave him more than that," said the detective, +positively. "If he had no more than this, he would not have been +such a fool as to put it all into land. He must have a hoard of +money concealed somewhere." + +"Of course he must. But where?" + +"Ah, let me look." + +He began to rummage about, peering into everything in the room, +moving the furniture, sounding the floor with his heels, and rapping +on the wall here and there. Finally he came to the fireplace, before +which he stopped. + +"This is July," said he. "And yet there are cinders here in the +fireplace." + +"People sometimes neglect to clean them out in the spring." + +"True; but are not these very clean and distinct? I don't find any +of the light dust and soot on them which ought to be there after +they have lain several months." + +He went into the second room whither he had sent the men after they +had completed their task, and said: + +"I wish one of you would get me a pickaxe." + +All the men rushed out; M. Lecoq returned to his companion. + +"Surely," muttered he, as if apart, "these cinders have been +disturbed recently, and if they have been--" + +He knelt down, and pushing the cinders away, laid bare the stones +of the fireplace. Then taking a thin piece of wood, he easily +inserted it into the cracks between the stones. + +"See here, Monsieur Plantat," said he. "There is no cement between +these stones, and they are movable; the treasure must be here." + +When the pickaxe was brought, he gave a single blow with it; the +stones gaped apart, and betrayed a wide and deep hole between them. + +"Ah," cried he, with a triumphant air, "I knew it well enough." + +The hole was full of rouleaux of twenty-franc pieces; on counting +them, M. Lecoq found that there were nineteen thousand five hundred +francs. + +The old justice's face betrayed an expression of profound grief. + +"That," thought he, "is the price of my poor Sauvresy's life." + +M. Lecoq found a small piece of paper, covered with figures, +deposited with the gold; it seemed to be Robelot's accounts. He +had put on the left hand the sum of forty thousand francs; on the +right hand, various sums were inscribed, the total of which was +twenty-one thousand five hundred francs. It was only too clear; +Mme. Sauvresy had paid Robelot forty thousand francs for the bottle +of poison. There was nothing more to learn at his house. They +locked the money up in the secretary, and affixed seals everywhere, +leaving two men on guard. + +But M. Lecoq was not quite satisfied yet. What was the manuscript +which Plantat had read? At first he had thought that it was simply +a copy of the papers confided to him by Sauvresy; but it could not +be that; Sauvresy couldn't have thus described the last agonizing +scenes of his life. This mystery mightily worried the detective +and dampened the joy he felt at having solved the crime at +Valfeuillu. He made one more attempt to surprise Plantat into +satisfying his curiosity. Taking him by the coat-lapel, he drew +him into the embrasure of a window, and with his most innocent air, +said: + +"I beg your pardon, are we going back to your house?" + +"Why should we? You know the doctor is going to meet us here." + +"I think we may need the papers you read to us, to convince Monsieur +Domini." + +M. Plantat smiled sadly, and looking steadily at him, replied: + +"You are very sly, Monsieur Lecoq; but I too am sly enough to keep +the last key of the mystery of which you hold all the others." + +"Believe me--" stammered M. Lecoq. + +"I believe," interrupted his companion, "that you would like very +well to know the source of my information. Your memory is too good +for you to forget that when I began last evening I told you that +this narrative was for your ear alone, and that I had only one +object in disclosing it--to aid our search. Why should you wish +the judge of instruction to see these notes, which are purely +personal, and have no legal or authentic character?" + +He reflected a few moments, and added: + +"I have too much confidence in you, Monsieur Lecoq, and esteem you +too much, not to have every trust that you will not divulge these +strict confidences. What you will say will be of as much weight as +anything I might divulge--especially now that you have Robelot's +body to back your assertions, as well as the money found in his +possession. If Monsieur Domini still hesitates to believe you, you +know that the doctor promises to find the poison which killed +Sauvresy." + +M. Plantat stopped and hesitated. + +"In short," he resumed, "I think you will be able to keep silence +as to what you have heard from me." + +M. Lecoq took him by the hand, and pressing it significantly, said: + +"Count on me, Monsieur." + +At this moment Dr. Gendron appeared at the door. + +"Courtois is better," said he. "He weeps like a child; but he will +come out of it." + +"Heaven be praised!" cried the old justice of the peace. "Now, +since you've come, let us hurry off to Corbeil; Monsieur Domini, +who is waiting for us this morning, must be mad with impatience." + + + + +XXIII + +M. Plantat, in speaking of M. Domini's impatience, did not exaggerate +the truth. That personage was furious; he could not comprehend the +reason of the prolonged absence of his three fellow-workers of the +previous evening. He had installed himself early in the morning in +his cabinet, at the court-house, enveloped in his judicial robe; and +he counted the minutes as they passed. His reflections during the +night, far from shaking, had only confirmed his opinion. As he +receded from the period of the crime, he found it very simple and +natural--indeed, the easiest thing in the world to account for. +He was annoyed that the rest did not share his convictions, and he +awaited their report in a state of irritation which his clerk only +too well perceived. He had eaten his breakfast in his cabinet, so +as to be sure and be beforehand with M. Lecoq. It was a useless +precaution; for the hours passed on and no one arrived. + +To kill time, he sent for Guespin and Bertaud and questioned them +anew, but learned nothing more than he had extracted from them the +night before. One of the prisoners swore by all things sacred that +he knew nothing except what he had already told; the other preserved +an obstinate and ferocious silence, confining himself to the remark: +"I know that I am lost; do with me what you please." + +M. Domini was just going to send a mounted gendarme to Orcival to +find out the cause of the delay, when those whom he awaited were +announced. He quickly gave the order to admit them, and so keen +was his curiosity, despite what he called his dignity, that he got +up and went forward to meet them. + +"How late you are!" said he. + +"And yet we haven't lost a minute," replied M. Plantat. "We haven't +even been in bed." + +"There is news, then? Has the count's body been found?" + +"There is much news, Monsieur," said M. Lecoq. "But the count's +body has not been found, and I dare even say that it will not be +found--for the very simple fact that he has not been killed. The +reason is that he was not one of the victims, as at first supposed, +but the assassin." + +At this distinct declaration on M. Lecoq's part, the judge started +in his seat. + +"Why, this is folly!" cried he. + +M. Lecoq never smiled in a magistrate's presence. "I do not think +so," said he, coolly; "I am persuaded that if Monsieur Domini will +grant me his attention for half an hour I will have the honor of +persuading him to share my opinion." + +M. Domini's slight shrug of the shoulders did not escape the +detective, but he calmly continued: + +"More; I am sure that Monsieur Domini will not permit me to leave +his cabinet without a warrant to arrest Count Hector de Tremorel, +whom at present he thinks to be dead." + +"Possibly," said M. Domini. "Proceed." + +M. Lecoq then rapidly detailed the facts gathered by himself and M. +Plantat from the beginning of the inquest. He narrated them not as +if he had guessed or been told of them, but in their order of time +and in such a manner that each new incident which, he mentioned +followed naturally from the preceding one. He had completely +resumed his character of a retired haberdasher, with a little piping +voice, and such obsequious expressions as, "I have the honor," and +"If Monsieur the Judge will deign to permit me;" he resorted to the +candy-box with the portrait, and, as the night before at Valfeuillu, +chewed a lozenge when he came to the more striking points. M. +Domini's surprise increased every minute as he proceeded; while at +times, exclamations of astonishment passed his lips: "Is it +possible?" "That is hard to believe!" + +M. Lecoq finished his recital; he tranquilly munched a lozenge, and +added: + +"What does Monsieur the Judge of Instruction think now?" + +M. Domini was fain to confess that he was almost satisfied. A man, +however, never permits an opinion deliberately and carefully formed +to be refuted by one whom he looks on as an inferior, without a +secret chagrin. But in this case the evidence was too abundant, +and too positive to be resisted. + +"I am convinced," said he, "that a crime was committed on Monsieur +Sauvresy with the dearly paid assistance of this Robelot. To-morrow +I shall give instructions to Doctor Gendron to proceed at once to an +exhumation and autopsy of the late master of Valfeuillu." + +"And you may be sure that I shall find the poison," chimed in the +doctor. + +"Very well," resumed M. Domini. "But does it necessarily follow that +because Monsieur Tremorel poisoned his friend to marry his widow, he +yesterday killed his wife and then fled? I don't think so." + +"Pardon me," objected Lecoq, gently. "It seems to me that +Mademoiselle Courtois's supposed suicide proves at least something." + +"That needs clearing up. This coincidence can only be a matter of +pure chance." + +"But I am sure that Monsieur Tremorel shaved himself--of that we +have proof; then, we did not find the boots which, according to +the valet, he put on the morning of the murder." + +"Softly, softly," interrupted the judge. "I don't pretend that you +are absolutely wrong; it must be as you say; only I give you my +objections. Let us admit that Tremorel killed his wife, that he +fled and is alive. Does that clear Guespin, and show that he took +no part in the murder?" + +This was evidently the flaw in Lecoq's case; but being convinced +of Hector's guilt, he had given little heed to the poor gardener, +thinking that his innocence would appear of itself when the real +criminal was arrested. He was about to reply, when footsteps and +voices were heard in the corridor. + +"Stop," said M. Domini. "Doubtless we shall now hear something +important about Guespin." + +"Are you expecting some new witness?" asked M. Plantat. + +"No; I expect one of the Corbeil police to whom I have given an +important mission." + +"Regarding Guespin?" + +"Yes. Very early this morning a young working-woman of the town, +whom Guespin has been courting, brought me an excellent photograph +of him. I gave this portrait to the agent with instructions to go +to the Vulcan's Forges and ascertain if Guespin had been seen there, +and whether he bought anything there night before last." + +M. Lecoq was inclined to be jealous; the judge's proceeding +ruffled him, and he could not conceal an expressive grimace. + +"I am truly grieved," said he, dryly, "that Monsieur the Judge +has so little confidence in me that he thinks it necessary to give +me assistance." + +This sensitiveness aroused M. Domini, who replied: + +"Eh! my dear man, you can't be everywhere at once. I think you +very shrewd, but you were not here, and I was in a hurry." + +"A false step is often irreparable." + +"Make yourself easy; I've sent an intelligent man." At this moment +the door opened, and the policeman referred to by the judge +appeared on the threshold. He was a muscular man about forty years +old, with a military pose, a heavy mustache, and thick brows, +meeting over the nose. He had a sly rather than a shrewd expression, +so that his appearance alone seemed to awake all sorts of suspicions +and put one instinctively on his guard. + +"Good news!" said he in a big voice: "I didn't make the journey to +Paris for the King of Prussia; we are right on the track of this +rogue of a Guespin." + +M. Domini encouraged him with an approving gesture. + +"See here, Goulard," said he, "let us go on in order if we can. You +went then, according to my instructions, to the Vulcan's Forges?" + +"At once, Monsieur." + +"Precisely. Had they seen the prisoner there?" + +"Yes; on the evening of Wednesday, July 8th." + +"At what hour?" + +"About ten o'clock, a few minutes before they shut up; so that he +was remarked, and the more distinctly observed." + +The judge moved his lips as if to make an objection, but was stopped +by a gesture from M. Lecoq. + +"And who recognized the photograph?" + +"Three of the clerks. Guespin's manner first attracted their +attention. It was strange, so they said, and they thought he was +drunk, or at least tipsy. Then their recollection was fixed by his +talking very fast, saying that he was going to patronize them a +great deal, and that if they would make a reduction in their prices +he would procure for them the custom of an establishment whose +confidence he possessed, the Gentil Jardinier, which bought a great +many gardening tools." + +M. Domini interrupted the examination to consult some papers which +lay before him on his desk. It was, he found, the Gentil Jardinier +which had procured Guespin his place in Tremorel's household. The +judge remarked this aloud, and added: + +"The question of identity seems to be settled. Guespin was +undoubtedly at the Vulcan's Forges on Wednesday night." + +"So much the better for him," M. Lecoq could not help muttering. + +The judge heard him, but though the remark seemed singular to him +he did not notice it, and went on questioning the agent. + +"Well, did they tell you what Guespin went there to obtain?" + +"The clerks recollected it perfectly. He first bought a hammer, +a cold chisel, and a file." + +"I knew it," exclaimed the judge. "And then?" + +"Then--" + +Here the man, ambitious to make a sensation among his hearers, +rolled his eyes tragically, and in a dramatic tone, added: + +"Then he bought a dirk knife!" + +The judge felt that he was triumphing over M. Lecoq. + +"Well," said he to the detective in his most ironical tone, "what +do you think of your friend now? What do you say to this honest +and worthy young man, who, on the very night of the crime, leaves +a wedding where he would have had a good time, to go and buy a +hammer, a chisel, and a dirk--everything, in short, used in the +murder and the mutilation of the body?" + +Dr. Gendron seemed a little disconcerted at this, but a sly smile +overspread M. Plantat's face. As for M. Lecoq, he had the air of +one who is shocked by objections which he knows he ought to +annihilate by a word, and yet who is fain to be resigned to waste +time in useless talk, which he might put to great profit. + +"I think, Monsieur," said he, very humbly, "that the murderers at +Valfeuillu did not use either a hammer or a chisel, or a file, and +that they brought no instrument at all from outside--since they +used a hammer." + +"And didn't they have a dirk besides?" asked the judge in a +bantering tone, confident that he was on the right path. + +"That is another question, I confess; but it is a difficult one +to answer." + +He began to lose patience. He turned toward the +Corbeil policeman, and abruptly asked him: + +"Is this all you know?" + +The big man with the thick eyebrows superciliously eyed this little +Parisian who dared to question him thus. He hesitated so long that +M. Lecoq, more rudely than before, repeated his question. + +"Yes, that's all," said Goulard at last, "and I think it's +sufficient; the judge thinks so too; and he is the only person who +gives me orders, and whose approbation I wish for." + +M. Lecoq shrugged his shoulders, and proceeded: + +"Let's see; did you ask what was the shape of the dirk bought by +Guespin? Was it long or short, wide or narrow?" + +"Faith, no. What was the use?" + +"Simply, my brave fellow, to compare this weapon with the victim's +wounds, and to see whether its handle corresponds to that which left +a distinct and visible imprint between the victim's shoulders." + +"I forgot it; but it is easily remedied." + +"An oversight may, of course, be pardoned; but you can at least tell +us in what sort of money Guespin paid for his purchases?" + +The poor man seemed so embarrassed, humiliated, and vexed, that the +judge hastened to his assistance. + +"The money is of little consequence, it seems to me," said he. + +"I beg you to excuse me I don't agree with you," returned M. Lecoq. +"This matter may be a very grave one. What is the most serious +evidence against Guespin? The money found in his pocket. Let us +suppose for a moment that night before last, at ten o'clock, he +changed a one-thousand-franc note in Paris. Could the obtaining +of that note have been the motive of the crime at Valfeuillu? No, +for up to that hour the crime had not been committed. Where could +it have come from? That is no concern of mine, at present. But if +my theory is correct, justice will be forced to agree that the +several hundred francs found in Guespin's possession can and must +be the change for the note." + +"That is only a theory," urged M. Domini in an irritated tone. + +"That is true; but one which may turn out a certainty. It remains +for me to ask this man how Guespin carried away the articles which +he bought? Did he simply slip them into his pocket, or did he have +them done up in a bundle, and if so, how?" + +The detective spoke in a sharp, hard, freezing tone, with a bitter +raillery in it, frightening his Corbeil colleague out of his +assurance. + +"I don't know," stammered the latter. "They didn't tell me--I +thought--" + +M. Lecoq raised his hands as if to call the heavens to witness: in +his heart, he was charmed with this fine occasion to revenge himself +for M. Domini's disdain. He could not, dared not say anything to +the judge; but he had the right to banter the agent and visit his +wrath upon him. + +"Ah so, my lad," said he, "what did you go to Paris for? To show +Guespin's picture and detail the crime to the people at Vulcan's +Forges? They ought to be very grateful to you; but Madame Petit, +Monsieur Plantat's housekeeper, would have done as much." + +At this stroke the man began to get angry; he frowned, and in his +bluffest tone, began: + +"Look here now, you--" + +"Ta, ta, ta," interrupted M. Lecoq. "Let me alone, and know who +is talking to you. I am Monsieur Lecoq." + +The effect of the famous detective's name on his antagonist was +magical. He naturally laid down his arms and surrendered, +straightway becoming respectful and obsequious. It almost flattered +him to be roughly handled by such a celebrity. He muttered, in an +abashed and admiring tone: + +"What, is it possible? You, Monsieur Lecoq!" + +"Yes, it is I, young man; but console yourself; I bear no grudge +against you. You don't know your trade, but you have done me a +service and you have brought us a convincing proof of Guespin's +innocence." + +M. Domini looked on at this scene with secret chagrin. His recruit +went over to the enemy, yielding without a struggle to a confessed +superiority. M. Lecoq's presumption, in speaking of a prisoner's +innocence whose guilt seemed to the judge indisputable, exasperated +him. + +"And what is this tremendous proof, if you please?" asked he. + +"It is simple and striking," answered M. Lecoq, putting on his most +frivolous air as his conclusions narrowed the field of probabilities. + +"You doubtless recollect that when we were at Valfeuillu we found +the hands of the clock in the bedroom stopped at twenty minutes past +three. Distrusting foul play, I put the striking apparatus in +motion--do you recall it? What happened? The clock struck eleven. +That convinced us that the crime was committed before that hour. But +don't you see that if Guespin was at the Vulcan's Forges at ten he +could not have got back to Valfeuillu before midnight? Therefore it +was not--he who did the deed." + +The detective, as he came to this conclusion, pulled out the +inevitable box and helped himself to a lozenge, at the same time +bestowing upon the judge a smile which said: + +"Get out of that, if you can." + +The judge's whole theory tumbled to pieces if M. Lecoq's deductions +were right; but he could not admit that he had been so much +deceived; he could not renounce an opinion formed by deliberate +reflection. + +"I don't pretend that Guespin is the only criminal," said he. "He +could only have been an accomplice; and that he was." + +"An accomplice? No, Judge, he was a victim. Ah, Tremorel is a +great rascal! Don't you see now why he put forward the hands? At +first I didn't perceive the object of advancing the time five hours; +now it is clear. In order to implicate Guespin the crime must +appear to have been committed after midnight, and--" + +He suddenly checked himself and stopped with open mouth and fixed +eyes as a new idea crossed his mind. The judge, who was bending +over his papers trying to find something to sustain his position, +did not perceive this. + +"But then," said the latter, "how do you explain Guespin's refusal +to speak and to give an account of where he spent the night?" + +M. Lecoq had now recovered from his emotion, and Dr. Gendron and M. +Plantat, who were watching him with the deepest attention, saw a +triumphant light in his eyes. Doubtless he had just found a +solution of the problem which had been put to him. + +"I understand," replied he, "and can explain Guespin's obstinate +silence. I should be perfectly amazed if he decided to speak just +now." + +M. Domini misconstrued the meaning of this; he thought he saw in it +a covert intention to banter him. + +"He has had a night to reflect upon it," he answered. "Is not twelve +hours enough to mature a system of defence?" + +The detective shook his head doubtfully. + +"It is certain that he does not need it," said he. "Our prisoner +doesn't trouble himself about a system of defence, that I'll +swear to." + +"He keeps quiet, because he hasn't been able to get up a plausible +story." + +"No, no; believe me, he isn't trying to get up one. In my opinion, +Guespin is a victim; that is, I suspect Tremorel of having set an +infamous trap for him, into which he has fallen, and in which he +sees himself so completely caught that he thinks it useless to +struggle. The poor wretch is convinced that the more he resists +the more surely he will tighten the web that is woven around him." + +"I think so, too," said M. Plantat. + +"The true criminal, Count Hector," resumed the detective, "lost his +presence of mind at the last moment, and thus lost all the advantages +which his previous caution had gained. Don't let us forget that he +is an able man, perfidious enough to mature the most infamous +stratagems, and unscrupulous enough to execute them. He knows that +justice must have its victims, one for every crime; he does not +forget that the police, as long as it has not the criminal, is +always on the search with eye and ear open; and he has thrown us +Guespin as a huntsman, closely pressed, throws his glove to the bear +that is close upon him. Perhaps he thought that the innocent man +would not be in danger of his life; at all events he hoped to gain +time by this ruse; while the bear is smelling and turning over the +glove, the huntsman gains ground, escapes and reaches his place of +refuge; that was what Tremorel proposed to do." + +The Corbeil policeman was now undoubtedly Lecoq's most enthusiastic +listener. Goulard literally drank in his chief's words. He had +never heard any of his colleagues express themselves with such +fervor and authority; he had had no idea of such eloquence, and he +stood erect, as if some of the admiration which he saw in all the +faces were reflected back on him. He grew in his own esteem as he +thought that he was a soldier in an army commanded by such generals. +He had no longer any opinion excepting that of his superior. It +was not so easy to persuade, subjugate, and convince the judge. + +"But," objected the latter, "you saw Guespin's countenance?" + +"Ah, what matters the countenance--what does that prove? Don't +we know if you and I were arrested to-morrow on a terrible charge, +what our bearing would be?" + +M. Domini gave a significant start; this hypothesis scarcely +pleased him. + +"And yet you and I are familiar with the machinery of justice. When +I arrested Lanscot, the poor servant in the Rue Marignan, his first +words were: 'Come on, my account is good.' The morning that Papa +Tabaret and I took the Viscount de Commarin as he was getting out +of bed, on the accusation of having murdered the widow Lerouge, he +cried: 'I am lost.' Yet neither of them were guilty; but both of +them, the viscount and the valet, equal before the terror of a +possible mistake of justice, and running over in their thoughts +the charges which would be brought against them, had a moment of +overwhelming discouragement." + +"But such discouragement does not last two days," said M. Domini. + +M. Lecoq did not answer this; he went on, growing more animated +as he proceeded. + +"You and I have seen enough prisoners to know how deceitful +appearances are, and how little they are to be trusted. It would +be foolish to base a theory upon a prisoner's bearing. He who +talked about 'the cry of innocence' was an idiot, just as the man +was who prated about the 'pale stupor' of guilt. Neither crime +nor virtue have, unhappily, any especial countenance. The Simon +girl, who was accused of having killed her father, absolutely +refused to answer any questions for twenty-two days; on the +twenty-third, the murderer was caught. As to the Sylvain affair--" + +M. Domini rapped lightly on his desk to check the detective. As a +man, the judge held too obstinately to his opinions; as a magistrate +he was equally obstinate, but was at the same time ready to make any +sacrifice of his self-esteem if the voice of duty prompted it. M. +Lecoq's arguments had not shaken his convictions, but they imposed +on him the duty of informing himself at once, and to either conquer +the detective or avow himself conquered. + +"You seem to be pleading," said he to M. Lecoq. "There is no need +of that here. We are not counsel and judge; the same honorable +intentions animate us both. Each, in his sphere, is searching after +the truth. You think you see it shining where I only discern clouds; +and you may be mistaken as well as I." + +Then by an act of heroism, he condescended to add: + +"What do you think I ought to do?" + +The judge was at least rewarded for the effort he made by approving +glances from M. Plantat and the doctor. But M. Lecoq did not hasten +to respond; he had many weighty reasons to advance; that, he saw, +was not what was necessary. He ought to present the facts, there +and at once, and produce one of those proofs which can be touched +with the finger. How should he do it? His active mind searched +eagerly for such a proof. + +"Well?" insisted M. Domini. + +"Ah," cried the detective. "Why can't I ask Guespin two or three +questions?" + +The judge frowned; the suggestion seemed to him rather presumptuous. +It is formally laid down that the questioning of the accused should +be done in secret, and by the judge alone, aided by his clerk. On +the other hand it is decided, that after he has once been +interrogated he may be confronted with witnesses. There are, +besides, exceptions in favor of the members of the police force. +M. Domini reflected whether there were any precedents to apply to +the case. + +"I don't know," he answered at last, "to what point the law permits +me to consent to what you ask. However, as I am convinced the +interests of truth outweigh all rules, I shall take it on myself +to let you question Guespin." + +He rang; a bailiff appeared. + +"Has Guespin been carried back to prison?" + +"Not yet, Monsieur." + +"So much the better; have him brought in here." + +M. Lecoq was beside himself with joy; he had not hoped to achieve +such a victory over one so determined as M. Domini. + +"He will speak now," said he, so full of confidence that his eyes +shone, and he forgot the portrait of the dear defunct, "for I have +three means of unloosening his tongue, one of which is sure to +succeed. But before he comes I should like to know one thing. Do +you know whether Tremorel saw Jenny after Sauvresy's death?" + +"Jenny?" asked M. Plantat, a little surprised. + +"Yes." + +"Certainly he did." + +"Several times?" + +"Pretty often. After the scene at the Belle Image the poor girl +plunged into terrible dissipation. Whether she was smitten with +remorse, or understood that it was her conduct which had killed +Sauvresy, or suspected the crime, I don't know. She began, however, +to drink furiously, falling lower and lower every week--" + +"And the count really consented to see her again?" + +"He was forced to do so; she tormented him, and he was afraid of +her. When she had spent all her money she sent to him for more, +and he gave it. Once he refused; and that very evening she went +to him the worse for wine, and he had the greatest difficulty in +the world to send her away again. In short, she knew what his +relations with Madame Sauvresy had been, and she threatened him; +it was a regular black-mailing operation. He told me all about +the trouble she gave him, and added that he would not be able to +get rid of her without shutting her up, which he could not bring +himself to do." + +"How long ago was their last interview?" + +"Why," answered the doctor, "not three weeks ago, when I had a +consultation at Melun, I saw the count and this demoiselle at a +hotel window; when he saw me he suddenly drew back." + +"Then," said the detective, "there is no longer any doubt--" + +He stopped. Guespin came in between two gendarmes. + +The unhappy gardener had aged twenty years in twenty-four hours. +His eyes were haggard, his dry lips were bordered with foam. + +"Let us see," said the judge. "Have you changed your mind about +speaking?" + +The prisoner did not answer. + +"Have you decided to tell us about yourself?" + +Guespin's rage made him tremble from head to foot, and his eyes +became fiery. + +"Speak!" said he hoarsely. "Why should I?" + +He added with the gesture of a desperate man who abandons himself, +renounces all struggling and all hope: + +"What have I done to you, my God, that you torture me this way? +What do you want me to say? That I did this crime--is that what +you want? Well, then--yes--it was I. Now you are satisfied. +Now cut my head off, and do it quick--for I don't want to suffer +any longer." + +A mournful silence welcomed Guespin's declaration. What, he +confessed it! + +M. Domini had at least the good taste not to exult; he kept still, +and yet this avowal surprised him beyond all expression. + +M. Lecoq alone, although surprised, was not absolutely put out of +countenance. He approached Guespin and tapping him on the shoulder, +said in a paternal tone: + +"Come, comrade, what you are telling us is absurd. Do you think +the judge has any secret grudge against you? No, eh? Do you +suppose I am interested to have you guillotined? Not at all. A +crime has been committed, and we are trying to find the assassin. +If you are innocent, help us to find the man who isn't: What were +you doing from Wednesday evening till Thursday morning?" + +But Guespin persisted in his ferocious and stupid obstinacy. + +"I've said what I have to say," said he. + +M. Lecoq changed his tone to one of severity, stepping back to watch +the effect he was about to produce upon Guespin. + +"You haven't any right to hold your tongue. And even if you do, +you fool, the police know everything. Your master sent you on an +errand, didn't he, on Wednesday night; what did he give you? A +one-thousand-franc note?" + +The prisoner looked at M. Lecoq in speechless amazement. + +"No," he stammered. "It was a five-hundred-franc note." + +The detective, like all great artists in a critical scene, was +really moved. His surprising genius for investigation had just +inspired him with a bold stroke, which, if it succeeded, would +assure him the victory. + +"Now," said he, "tell me the woman's name." + +"I don't know." + +"You are only a fool then. She is short, isn't she, quite pretty, +brown and pale, with very large eyes?" + +"You know her, then?" said Guespin, in a voice trembling with +emotion. + +"Yes, comrade, and if you want to know her name, to put in your +prayers, she is called--Jenny." + +Men who are really able in some specialty, whatever it may be, never +uselessly abuse their superiority; their satisfaction at seeing it +recognized is sufficient reward. M. Lecoq softly enjoyed his +triumph, while his hearers wondered at his perspicacity. A rapid +chain of reasoning had shown him not only Tremorel's thoughts, but +also the means he had employed to accomplish his purpose. + +Guespin's astonishment soon changed to anger. He asked himself how +this man could have been informed of things which he had every +reason to believe were secret. Lecoq continued: + +"Since I have told you the woman's name, tell me now, how and why +the count gave you a five-hundred-franc note." + +"It was just as I was going out. The count had no change, and did +not want to send me to Orcival for it. I was to bring back the +rest." + +"And why didn't you rejoin your companions at the wedding in the +Batignolles?" + +No answer. + +"What was the errand which you were to do for the count?" + +Guespin hesitated. His eyes wandered from one to another of those +present, and he seemed to discover an ironical expression on all +the faces. It occurred to him that they were making sport of him, +and had set a snare into which he had fallen. A great despair +took possession of him. + +"Ah," cried he, addressing M. Lecoq, "you have deceived me. You +have been lying so as to find out the truth. I have been such a +fool as to answer you, and you are going to turn it all against me." + +"What? Are you going to talk nonsense again?" + +"No, but I see just how it is, and you won't catch me again! Now +I'd rather die than say a word." + +The detective tried to reassure him; but he added: + +"Besides, I'm as sly as you; I've told you nothing but lies." + +This sudden whim surprised no one. Some prisoners intrench +themselves behind a system of defence, and nothing can divert them +from it; others vary with each new question, denying what they have +just affirmed, and constantly inventing some new absurdity which +anon they reject again. M. Lecoq tried in vain to draw Guespin +from his silence; M. Domini made the same attempt, and also failed; +to all questions he only answered, "I don't know." + +At last the detective waxed impatient. + +"See here," said he to Guespin, "I took you for a young man of +sense, and you are only an ass. Do you imagine that we don't know +anything? Listen: On the night of Madame Denis's wedding, you +were getting ready to go off with your comrades, and had just +borrowed twenty francs from the valet, when the count called you. +He made you promise absolute secrecy (a promise which, to do you +justice, you kept); he told you to leave the other servants at +the station and go to Vulcan's Forges, where you were to buy for +him a hammer, a file, a chisel, and a dirk; these you were to carry +to a certain woman. Then he gave you this famous five-hundred-franc +note, telling you to bring him back the change when you returned +next day. Isn't that so?" + +An affirmative response glistened in the prisoner's eyes; still, +he answered, "I don't recollect it." + +"Now," pursued M. Lecoq, "I'm going to tell you what happened +afterwards. You drank something and got tipsy, and in short spent +a part of the change of the note. That explains your fright when +you were seized yesterday morning, before anybody said a word to +you. You thought you were being arrested for spending that money. +Then, when you learned that the count had been murdered during the +night, recollecting that on the evening before you had bought all +kinds of instruments of theft and murder, and that you didn't know +either the address or the name of the woman to whom you gave up +the package, convinced that if you explained the source of the +money found in your pocket, you would not be believed--then, +instead of thinking of the means to prove your innocence, you +became afraid, and thought you would save yourself by holding your +tongue." + +The prisoner's countenance visibly changed; his nerves relaxed; +his tight lips fell apart; his mind opened itself to hope. But he +still resisted. + +"Do with me as you like," said he. + +"Eh! What should we do with such a fool as you?" cried M. Lecoq +angrily. "I begin to think you are a rascal too. A decent fellow +would see that we wanted to get him out of a scrape, and he'd tell +us the truth. You are prolonging your imprisonment by your own +will. You'd better learn that the greatest shrewdness consists in +telling the truth. A last time, will you answer?" + +Guespin shook his head; no. + +"Go back to prison, then; since it pleases you," concluded the +detective. He looked at the judge for his approval, and added: + +"Gendarmes, remove the prisoner." + +The judge's last doubt was dissipated like the mist before the sun. +He was, to tell the truth, a little uneasy at having treated the +detective so rudely; and he tried to repair it as much as he could. + +"You are an able man, Monsieur Lecoq," said he. "Without speaking +of your clearsightedness, which is so prompt as to seem almost like +second sight, your examination just now was a master-piece of its +kind. Receive my congratulations, to say nothing of the reward +which I propose to recommend in your favor to your chiefs." + +The detective at these compliments cast down his eyes with the +abashed air of a virgin. He looked tenderly at the dear defunct's +portrait, and doubtless said to it: + +"At last, darling, we have defeated him--this austere judge who so +heartily detests the force of which we are the brightest ornament, +makes his apologies; he recognizes and applauds our services." + +He answered aloud: + +"I can only accept half of your eulogies, Monsieur; permit me to +offer the other half to my friend Monsieur Plantat." + +M. Plantat tried to protest. + +"Oh," said he, "only for some bits of information! You would have +ferreted out the truth without me all the same." + +The judge arose and graciously, but not without effort, extended +his hand to M. Lecoq, who respectfully pressed it. + +"You have spared me," said the judge, "a great remorse. Guespin's +innocence would surely sooner or later have been recognized; but +the idea of having imprisoned an innocent man and harassed him with +my interrogatories, would have disturbed my sleep and tormented my +conscience for a long time." + +"God knows this poor Guespin is not an interesting youth," returned +the detective. "I should be disposed to press him hard were I not +certain that he's half a fool." + +M. Domini gave a start. + +"I shall discharge him this very day," said he, "this very hour." + +"It will be an act of charity," said M. Lecoq; "but confound his +obstinacy; it was so easy for him to simplify my task. I might be +able, by the aid of chance, to collect the principal facts--the +errand, and a woman being mixed up in the affair; but as I'm no +magician, I couldn't guess all the details. How is Jenny mixed +up in this affair? Is she an accomplice, or has she only been +made to play an ignorant part in it? Where did she meet Guespin +and whither did she lead him? It is clear that she made the poor +fellow tipsy so as to prevent his going to the Batignolles. +Tremorel must have told her some false story--but what?" + +"I don't think Tremorel troubled his head about so small a matter," +said M. Plantat. "He gave Guespin and Jenny some task, without +explaining it at all." + +M. Lecoq reflected a moment. + +"Perhaps you are right. But Jenny must have had special orders to +prevent Guespin from putting in an alibi." + +"But," said M. Domini, "Jenny will explain it all to us." + +"That is what I rely on; and I hope that within forty-eight hours +I shall have found her and brought her safely to Corbeil." + +He rose at these words, took his cane and hat, and turning to the +judge, said: + +"Before retiring--" + +"Yes, I know," interrupted M. Domini, "you want a warrant to arrest +Hector de Tremorel." + +"I do, as you are now of my opinion that he is still alive." + +"I am sure of it." + +M. Domini opened his portfolio and wrote off a warrant as follows: + +"By the law: +"We, judge of instruction of the first tribunal, etc., considering +articles 91 and 94 of the code of criminal instruction, command and +ordain to all the agents of the police to arrest, in conformity +with the law, one Hector de Tremorel, etc." + +When he had finished, he said: + +"Here it is, and may you succeed in speedily finding this great +criminal." + +"Oh, he'll find him," cried the Corbeil policeman. + +"I hope so, at least. As to how I shall go to work, I don't know +yet. I will arrange my plan of battle to-night." + +The detective then took leave of M. Domini and retired, followed +by M. Plantat. The doctor remained with the judge to make +arrangements for Sauvresy's exhumation. + +M. Lecoq was just leaving the court-house when he felt himself +pulled by the arm. He turned and found that it was Goulard who +came to beg his favor and to ask him to take him along, persuaded +that after having served under so great a captain he must inevitably +become a famous man himself. M. Lecoq had some difficulty in +getting rid of him; but he at length found himself alone in the +street with the old justice of the peace. + +"It is late," said the latter. "Would it be agreeable to you to +partake of another modest dinner with me, and accept my cordial +hospitality?" + +"I am chagrined to be obliged to refuse you," replied M. Lecoq. +"But I ought to be in Paris this evening." + +"But I--in fact, I--was very anxious to talk to you--about--" + +"About Mademoiselle Laurence?" + +"Yes; I have a plan, and if you would help me--" + +M. Lecoq affectionately pressed his friend's hand. + +"I have only known you a few hours," said he, "and yet I am as +devoted to you as I would be to an old friend. All that is humanly +possible for me to do to serve you, I shall certainly do." + +"But where shall I see you? They expect me to-day at Orcival." + +"Very well; to-morrow morning at nine, at my rooms, No--Rue +Montmartre." + +"A thousand thanks; I shall be there." + +When they had reached the Belle Image they separated. + + + + +XXIV + +Nine o'clock had just struck in the belfry of the church of St. +Eustache, when M. Plantat reached Rue Montmartre, and entered the +house bearing the number which M. Lecoq had given him. + +"Monsieur Lecoq?" said he to an old woman who was engaged in getting +breakfast for three large cats which were mewing around her. The +woman scanned him with a surprised and suspicious air. M. Plantat, +when he was dressed up, had much more the appearance of a fine old +gentleman than of a country attorney; and though the detective +received many visits from all sorts of people, it was rarely that +the denizens of the Faubourg Saint Germaine rung his bell. + +"Monsieur Lecoq's apartments," answered the old woman, "are on the +third story, the door facing the stairs." + +The justice of the peace slowly ascended the narrow, ill-lighted +staircase, which in its dark corners was almost dangerous. He was +thinking of the strange step he was about to take. An idea had +occurred to him, but he did not know whether it were practicable, +and at all events he needed the aid and advice of the detective. +He was forced to disclose his most secret thoughts, as it were, +to confess himself; and his heart beat fast. The door opposite the +staircase on the third story was not like other doors; it was of +plain oak, thick, without mouldings, and fastened with iron bars. +It would have looked like a prison door had not its sombreness been +lightened by a heavily colored engraving of a cock crowing, with +the legend "Always Vigilant." Had the detective put his coat of +arms up there? Was it not more likely that one of his men had done +it? After examining the door more than a minute, and hesitating +like a youth before his beloved's gate, he rang the bell. A +creaking of locks responded, and through the narrow bars of the +peephole he saw the hairy face of an old crone. + +"What do you want?" said the woman, in a deep, bass voice. + +"Monsieur Lecoq." + +"What do you want of him?" + +"He made an appointment with me for this morning." + +"Your name and business?" + +"Monsieur Plantat, justice of the peace at Orcival." + +"All right. Wait." + +The peephole was closed and the old man waited. + +"Peste!" growled he. "Everybody can't get in here, it seems." +Hardly had this reflection passed through his mind when the door +opened with a noise as of chains and locks. He entered, and the +old crone, after leading him through a dining-room whose sole +furniture was a table and six chairs, introduced him to a large +room, half toilet-room and half working-room, lighted by two windows +looking on the court, and guarded by strong, close bars. + +"If you will take the trouble to sit," said the servant, "Monsieur +Lecoq will soon be here; he is giving orders to one of his men." + +But M. Plantat did not take a seat; he preferred to examine the +curious apartment in which he found himself. The whole of one +side of the wall was taken up with a long rack, where hung the +strangest and most incongruous suits of clothes. There were +costumes belonging to all grades of society; and on some wooden +pegs above, wigs of all colors were hanging; while boots and shoes +of various styles were ranged on the floor. A toilet-table, +covered with powders, essences, and paints, stood between the +fireplace and the window. On the other side of the room was a +bookcase full of scientific works, especially of physic and +chemistry. The most singular piece of furniture in the apartment, +however, was a large ball, shaped like a lozenge, in black velvet, +suspended beside the looking-glass. A quantity of pins were stuck +in this ball, so as to form the letters composing these two names: +HECTOR-JENNY. + +These names glittering on the black background attracted the old +man's attention at once. This must have been M. Lecoq's reminder. +The ball was meant to recall to him perpetually the people of whom +he was in pursuit. Many names, doubtless, had in turn glittered on +that velvet, for it was much frayed and perforated. An unfinished +letter lay open upon the bureau. + +M. Plantat leaned over to read it; but he took his trouble for +nothing, for it was written in cipher. + +He had no sooner finished his inspection of the room than the noise +of a door opening made him turn round. He saw before him a man of +his own age, of respectable mien, and polite manners, a little bald, +with gold spectacles and a light-colored flannel dressing-gown. + +M. Plantat bowed, saying: + +"I am waiting here for Monsieur Lecoq." + +The man in gold spectacles burst out laughing, and clapped his +hands with glee. + +"What, dear sir," said he, "don't you know me? Look at me well-- +it is I--Monsieur Lecoq!" And to convince him, he took off his +spectacles. Those might, indeed, be Lecoq's eyes, and that his +voice; M. Plantat was confounded. + +"I never should have recognized you," said he. + +"It's true, I have changed a little--but what would you have? It's +my trade." + +And pushing a chair toward his visitor, he pursued: + +"I have to beg a thousand pardons for the formalities you've had +to endure to get in here; it's a dire necessity, but one I can't +help. I have told you of the dangers to which I am exposed; they +pursue me to my very door. Why, last week a railway porter brought +a package here addressed to me. Janouille--that's my old woman-- +suspected nothing, though she has a sharp nose, and told him to +come in. He held out the package, I went up to take it, when pif! +paf! off went two pistol-shots. The package was a revolver wrapped +up in oilcloth, and the porter was a convict escaped from Cayenne, +caught by me last year. Ah, I put him through for this though!" + +He told this adventure carelessly, as if it were the most natural +thing in the world. + +"But let's not starve ourselves to death," he continued, ringing +the bell. The old hag appeared, and he ordered her to bring on +breakfast forthwith, and above all, some good wine. + +"You are observing my Janouille," remarked he, seeing that M. +Plantat looked curiously at the servant. "She's a pearl, my dear +friend, who watches over me as if I were her child, and would go +through the fire for me. I had a good deal of trouble the other +day to prevent her strangling the false railway porter. I picked +her out of three or four thousand convicts. She had been convicted +of infanticide and arson. I would bet a hundred to one that, +during the three years that she has been in my service, she has not +even thought of robbing me of so much as a centime." + +But M. Plantat only listened to him with one ear; he was trying to +find an excuse for cutting Janouille's story short, and to lead the +conversation to the events of the day before. + +"I have, perhaps, incommoded you a little this morning, Monsieur +Lecoq?" + +"Me? then you did not see my motto--'always vigilant?' Why, I've +been out ten times this morning; besides marking out work for three +of my men. Ah, we have little time to ourselves, I can tell you. +I went to the Vulcan's Forges to see what news I could get of that +poor devil of a Guespin." + +"And what did you hear?" + +"That I had guessed right. He changed a five-hundred-franc note +there last Wednesday evening at a quarter before ten." + +"That is to say, he is saved?" + +"Well, you may say so. He will be, as soon as we have found Miss +Jenny." + +The old justice of the peace could not avoid showing his uneasiness. + +"That will, perhaps, be long and difficult?" + +"Bast! Why so? She is on my black ball there--we shall have her, +accidents excepted, before night." + +"You really think so?" + +"I should say I was sure, to anybody but you. Reflect that this +girl has been connected with the Count de Tremorel, a man of the +world, a prince of the mode. When a girl falls to the gutter, after +having, as they say, dazzled all Paris for six months with her +luxury, she does not disappear entirely, like a stone in the mud. +When she has lost all her friends there are still her creditors, who +follow and watch her, awaiting the day when fortune will smile on +her once more. She doesn't trouble herself about them, she thinks +they've forgotten her; a mistake! I know a milliner whose head is +a perfect dictionary of the fashionable world; she has often done +me a good turn. We will go and see her if you say so, after +breakfast, and in two hours she will give us Jenny's address. Ah, +if I were only as sure of pinching Tremorel!" + +M. Plantat gave a sigh of relief. The conversation at last took +the turn he wished. + +"You are thinking of him, then?" asked he. + +"Am I?" shouted M. Lecoq, who started from his seat at the question. +"Now just look at my black ball there. I haven't thought of anybody +else, mark you, since yesterday; I haven't had a wink of sleep all +night for thinking of him. I must have him, and I will!" + +"I don't doubt it; but when?" + +"Ah, there it is! Perhaps to-morrow, perhaps in a month; it depends +on the correctness of my calculations and the exactness of my plan." + +"What, is your plan made?" + +"And decided on." + +M. Plantat became attention itself. + +"I start from the principle that it is impossible for a man, +accompanied by a woman, to hide from the police. In this case, +the woman is young, pretty, and in a noticeable condition; three +impossibilities more. Admit this, and we'll study Hector's +character. He isn't a man of superior shrewdness, for we have +found out all his dodges. He isn't a fool, because his dodges +deceived people who are by no means fools. He is then a medium +sort of a man, and his education, reading, relations, and daily +conversation have procured him a number of acquaintances whom he +will try to use. Now for his mind. We know the weakness of his +character; soft, feeble, vacillating, only acting in the last +extremity. We have seen him shrinking from decisive steps, trying +always to delay matters. He is given to being deceived by +illusions, and to taking his desires for accomplished events. In +short, he is a coward. And what is his situation? He has killed +his wife, he hopes he has created a belief in his own death, he has +eloped with a young girl, and he has got nearly or quite a million +of francs in his pocket. Now, this position admitted, as well as +the man's character and mind, can we by an effort of thought, +reasoning from his known actions, discover what he has done in such +and such a case? I think so, and I hope I shall prove it to you." + +M. Lecoq rose and promenaded, as his habit was, up and down the +room. "Now let's see," he continued, "how I ought to proceed in +order to discover the probable conduct of a man whose antecedents, +traits, and mind are known to me. To begin with, I throw off my +own individuality and try to assume his. I substitute his will for +my own. I cease to be a detective and become this man, whatever he +is. In this case, for instance, I know very well what I should do +if I were Tremorel. I should take such measures as would throw all +the detectives in the universe off the scent. But I must forget +Monsieur Lecoq in order to become Hector de Tremorel. How would a +man reason who was base enough to rob his friend of his wife, and +then see her poison her husband before his very eyes? We already +know that Tremorel hesitated a good while before deciding to commit +this crime. The logic of events, which fools call fatality, urged +him on. It is certain that he looked upon the murder in every point +of view, studied its results, and tried to find means to escape from +justice. All his acts were determined on long beforehand, and +neither immediate necessity nor unforeseen circumstances disturbed +his mind. The moment he had decided on the crime, he said to +himself: 'Grant that Bertha has been murdered; thanks to my +precautions, they think that I have been killed too; Laurence, +with whom I elope, writes a letter in which she announces her +suicide; I have money, what must I do?' The problem, it seems to +me, is fairly put in this way." + +"Perfectly so," approved M. Plantat. + +"Naturally, Tremorel would choose from among all the methods of +flight of which he had ever heard, or which he could imagine, that +which seemed to him the surest and most prompt. Did he meditate +leaving the country? That is more than probable. Only, as he was +not quite out of his senses, he saw that it was most difficult, in +a foreign country, to put justice off the track. If a man flies +from France to escape punishment, he acts absurdly. Fancy a man +and woman wandering about a country of whose language they are +ignorant; they attract attention at once, are observed, talked +about, followed. They do not make a purchase which is not remarked; +they cannot make any movement without exciting curiosity. The +further they go the greater their danger. If they choose to cross +the ocean and go to free America, they must go aboard a vessel; and +the moment they do that they may be considered as good as lost. +You might bet twenty to one they would find, on landing on the other +side, a detective on the pier armed with a warrant to arrest them. +I would engage to find a Frenchman in eight days, even in London, +unless he spoke pure enough English to pass for a citizen of the +United Kingdom. Such were Tremorel's reflections. He recollected +a thousand futile attempts, a hundred surprising adventures, +narrated by the papers; and it is certain that he gave up the idea +of going abroad." + +"It's clear," cried M. Plantat, "perfectly plain and precise. We +must look for the fugitives in France." + +"Yes," replied M. Lecoq. "Now let's find out where and how people +can hide themselves in France. Would it be in the provinces? +Evidently not. In Bordeaux, one of our largest cities, people stare +at a man who is not a Bordelais. The shopkeepers on the quays say +to their neighbors: 'Eh! do you know that man?' There are two +cities, however, where a man may pass unnoticed--Marseilles and +Lyons; but both of these are distant, and to reach them a long +journey must be risked--and nothing is so dangerous as the railway +since the telegraph was established. One can fly quickly, it's +true; but on entering a railway carriage a man shuts himself in, +and until he gets out of it he remains under the thumb of the +police. Tremorel knows all this as well as we do. We will put all +the large towns, including Lyons and Marseilles, out of the +question." + +"In short, it's impossible to hide in the provinces." + +"Excuse me--there is one means; that is, simply to buy a modest +little place at a distance from towns and railways, and to go and +reside on it under a false name. But this excellent project is +quite above Tremorel's capacity, and requires preparatory steps +which he could not risk, watched as he was by his wife. The field +of investigation is thus much narrowed. Putting aside foreign +parts, the provinces, the cities, the country, Paris remains. It +is in Paris that we must look for Tremorel." + +M. Lecoq spoke with the certainty and positiveness of a +mathematical professor; the old justice of the peace listened, as +do the professor's scholars. But he was already accustomed to the +detective's surprising clearness, and was no longer astonished. +During the four-and-twenty hours that he had been witnessing M. +Lecoq's calculations and gropings, he had seized the process and +almost appropriated it to himself. He found this method of +reasoning very simple, and could now explain to himself certain +exploits of the police which had hitherto seemed to him miraculous. +But M. Lecoq's "narrow field" of observation appeared still immense. + +"Paris is a large place," observed the old justice. + +M. Lecoq smiled loftily. + +"Perhaps so; but it is mine. All Paris is under the eye of the +police, just as an ant is under that of the naturalist with his +microscope. How is it, you may ask, that Paris still holds so +many professional rogues? Ah, that is because we are hampered by +legal forms. The law compels us to use only polite weapons against +those to whom all weapons are serviceable. The courts tie our +hands. The rogues are clever, but be sure that our cleverness is +much greater than theirs." + +"But," interrupted M. Plantat, "Tremorel is now outside the law; +we have the warrant." + +"What matters it? Does the warrant give me the right to search any +house in which I may have reason to suppose he is hiding himself? +No. If I should go to the house of one of Hector's old friends he +would kick me out of doors. You must know that in France the police +have to contend not only with the rogues, but also with the honest +people." + +M. Lecoq always waxed warm on this subject; he felt a strong +resentment against the injustice practised on his profession. +Fortunately, at the moment when he was most excited, the black ball +suddenly caught his eye. + +"The devil!" exclaimed he, "I was forgetting Hector." + +M. Plantat, though listening patiently to his companion's indignant +utterances, could not help thinking of the murderer. + +"You said that we must look for Tremorel in Paris," he remarked. + +"And I said truly," responded M. Lecoq in a calmer tone. "I have +come to the conclusion that here, perhaps within two streets of +us, perhaps in the next house, the fugitives are hid. But let's go +on with our calculation of probabilities. Hector knows Paris too +well to hope to conceal himself even for a week in a hotel or +lodging-house; he knows these are too sharply watched by the police. +He had plenty of time before him, and so arranged to hire apartments +in some convenient house." + +"He came to Paris three or four times some weeks ago." + +"Then there's no longer any doubt about it. He hired some +apartments under a false name, paid in advance, and to-day he is +comfortably ensconced in his new residence." + +M. Plantat seemed to feel extremely distressed at this. + +"I know it only too well, Monsieur Lecoq," said he, sadly. "You +must be right. But is not the wretch thus securely hidden from us? +Must we wait till some accident reveals him to us? Can you search +one by one all the houses in Paris?" + +The detective's nose wriggled under his gold spectacles, and the +justice of the peace, who observed it, and took it for a good sign, +felt all his hopes reviving in him. + +"I've cudgelled my brain in vain--" he began. + +"Pardon me," interrupted M. Lecoq. "Having hired apartments, +Tremorel naturally set about furnishing them." + +"Evidently." + +"Of course he would furnish them sumptuously, both because he is +fond of luxury and has plenty of money, and because he couldn't +carry a young girl from a luxurious home to a garret. I'd wager +that they have as fine a drawing-room as that at Valfeuillu." + +"Alas! How can that help us?" + +"Peste! It helps us much, my dear friend, as you shall see. Hector, +as he wished for a good deal of expensive furniture, did not have +recourse to a broker; nor had he time to go to the Faubourg St. +Antoine. Therefore, he simply went to an upholsterer." + +"Some fashionable upholsterer--" + +"No, he would have risked being recognized. It is clear that he +assumed a false name, the same in which he had hired his rooms. He +chose some shrewd and humble upholsterer, ordered his goods, made +sure that they would be delivered on a certain day, and paid for +them." + +M. Plantat could not repress a joyful exclamation; he began to see +M. Lecoq's drift. + +"This merchant," pursued the latter, "must have retained his rich +customer in his memory, this customer who did not beat him down, +and paid cash. If he saw him again, he would recognize him." + +"What an idea!" cried M. Plantat, delighted. "Let's get photographs +and portraits of Tremorel as quick as we can--let's send a man to +Orcival for them." + +M. Lecoq smiled shrewdly and proceeded: + +"Keep yourself easy; I have done what was necessary. I slipped +three of the count's cartes-de-visite in my pocket yesterday during +the inquest. This morning I took down, out of the directory, the +names of all the upholsterers in Paris, and made three lists of +them. At this moment three of my men, each with a list and a +photograph, are going from upholsterer to upholsterer showing them +the picture and asking them if they recognize it as the portrait of +one of their customers. If one of them answers 'yes,' we've got +our man." + +"And we will get him!" cried the old man, pale with emotion. + +"Not yet; don't shout victory too soon. It is possible that Hector +was prudent enough not to go to the upholsterer's himself. In this +case we are beaten in that direction. But no, he was not so sly +as that--" + +M. Lecoq checked himself. Janouille, for the third time, opened +the door, and said, in a deep bass voice: + +"Breakfast is ready." + +Janouille was a remarkable cook; M. Plantat had ample experience of +the fact when he began upon her dishes. But he was not hungry, and +could not force himself to eat; he could not think of anything but +a plan which he had to propose to his host, and he had that +oppressive feeling which is experienced when one is about to do +something which has been decided on with hesitation and regret. +The detective, who, like all men of great activity, was a great +eater, vainly essayed to entertain his guest, and filled his glass +with the choicest Chateau Margaux; the old man sat silent and sad, +and only responded by monosyllables. He tried to speak out and to +struggle against the hesitation he felt. He did not think, when he +came, that he should have this reluctance; he had said to himself +that he would go in and explain himself. Did he fear to be +ridiculed? No. His passion was above the fear of sarcasm or irony. +And what did he risk? Nothing. Had not M. Lecoq already divined +the secret thoughts he dared not impart to him, and read his heart +from the first? He was reflecting thus when the door-bell rang. +Janouille went to the door, and speedily returned with the +announcement that Goulard begged to speak with M. Lecoq, and asked +if she should admit him. + +"Certainly." + +The chains clanked and the locks scraped, and presently Goulard +made his appearance. He had donned his best clothes, with spotless +linen, and a very high collar. He was respectful, and stood as +stiffly as a well-drilled grenadier before his sergeant. + +"What the deuce brought you here?" said M. Lecoq, sternly. "And +who dared to give you my address?" + +"Monsieur," said Goulard, visibly intimidated by his reception, +"please excuse me; I was sent by Doctor Gendron with this letter +for Monsieur Plantat." + +"Oh," cried M. Plantat, "I asked the doctor, last evening, to let +me know the result of the autopsy, and not knowing where I should +put up, took the liberty of giving your address." + +M. Lecoq took the letter and handed it to his guest. "Read it, +read it," said the latter. "There is nothing in it to conceal." + +"All right; but come into the other room. Janouille, give this man +some breakfast. Make yourself at home, Goulard, and empty a bottle +to my health." + +When the door of the other room was closed, M. Lecoq broke the seal +of the letter, and read: + +"MY DEAR PLANTAT: + +"You asked me for a word, so I scratch off a line or two which I +shall send to our sorcerer's--" + +"Oh, ho," cried M. Lecoq. "Monsieur Gendron is too good, too +flattering, really!" + +No matter, the compliment touched his heart. He resumed the letter: + +"At three this morning we exhumed poor Sauvresy's body. I +certainly deplore the frightful circumstances of this worthy man's +death as much as anyone; but on the other hand, I cannot help +rejoicing at this excellent opportunity to test the efficacy of my +sensitive paper--" + +"Confound these men of science," cried the indignant Plantat. "They +are all alike!" + +"Why so? I can very well comprehend the doctor's involuntary +sensations. Am I not ravished when I encounter a fine crime?" + +And without waiting for his guest's reply, he continued reading the +letter: + +"The experiments promised, to be all the more conclusive as +aconitine is one, of those drugs which conceal themselves most +obstinately from analysis. I proceed thus: After heating the +suspected substances in twice their weight of alcohol, I drop the +liquid gently into a vase with edges a little elevated, at the +bottom of which is a piece of paper on which I have placed my tests. +If my paper retains its color, there is no poison; if it changes, +the poison is there. In this case my paper was of a light yellow +color, and if we were not mistaken, it ought either to become +covered with brown spots, or completely brown. I explained this +experiment beforehand to the judge of instruction and the experts +who were assisting me. Ah, my friend, what a success I had! When +the first drops of alcohol fell, the paper at once became a dark +brown; your suspicions are thus proved to be quite correct. The +substances which I submitted to the test were liberally saturated +with aconitine. I never obtained more decisive results in my +laboratory. I expect that my conclusions will be disputed in court; +but I have means of verifying them, so that I shall surely confound +all the chemists who oppose me. I think, my dear friend, that you +will not be indifferent to the satisfaction I feel--" + +M. Plantat lost patience. + +"This is unheard-of!" cried he. "Incredible! Would you say, now, +that this poison which he found in Sauvresy's body was stolen from +his own laboratory? Why, that body is nothing more to him than +'suspected matter!' And he already imagines himself discussing the +merits of his sensitive paper in court!" + +"He has reason to look for antagonists in court." + +"And meanwhile he makes his experiments, and analyzes with the +coolest blood in the world; he continues his abominable cooking, +boiling and filtering, and preparing his arguments--!" + +M. Lecoq did not share in his friend's indignation; he was not sorry +at the prospect of a bitter struggle in court, and he imagined a +great scientific duel, like that between Orfila and Raspail, the +provincial and Parisian chemists. + +"If Tremorel has the face to deny his part in Sauvresy's murder," +said he, "we shall have a superb trial of it." + +This word "trial" put an end to M. Plantat's long hesitation. + +"We mustn't have any trial," cried he. + +The old man's violence, from one who was usually so calm and +self-possessed, seemed to amaze M. Lecoq. + +"Ah ha," thought he, "I'm going to know all." He added aloud: + +"What, no trial?" + +M. Plantat had turned whiter than a sheet; he was trembling, and +his voice was hoarse, as if broken by sobs. + +"I would give my fortune," resumed he "to avoid a trial--every +centime of it, though it doesn't amount to much. But how can we +secure this wretch Tremorel from a conviction? What subterfuge +shall we invent? You alone, my friend, can advise me in the +frightful extremity to which you see me reduced, and aid me to +accomplish what I wish. If there is any way in the world, you +will find it and save me--" + +"But, my--" + +"Pardon--hear me, and you will comprehend me. I am going to be frank +with you, as I would be with myself; and you will see the reason of +my hesitation, my silence, in short, of all my conduct since the +discovery of the crime." + +"I am listening." + +"It's a sad history, Lecoq. I had reached an age at which a man's +career is, as they say, finished, when I suddenly lost my wife and +my two sons, my whole joy, my whole hope in this world. I found +myself alone in life, more lost than the shipwrecked man in the +midst of the sea, without a plank to sustain me. I was a soulless +body, when chance brought me to settle down at Orcival. There I +saw Laurence; she was just fifteen, and never lived there a +creature who united in herself so much intelligence, grace, +innocence, and beauty. Courtois became my friend, and soon Laurence +was like a daughter to me. I doubtless loved her then, but I did +not confess it to myself, for I did not read my heart clearly. She +was so young, and I had gray hairs! I persuaded myself that my +love for her was like that of a father, and it was as a father that +she cherished me. Ah, I passed many a delicious hour listening to +her gentle prattle and her innocent confidences; I was happy when +I saw her skipping about in my garden, picking the roses I had +reared for her, and laying waste my parterres; and I said to +myself that existence is a precious gift from God. My dream then +was to follow her through life. I fancied her wedded to some +good man who made her happy, while I remained the friend of the +wife, after having been the confidant of the maiden. I took good +care of my fortune, which is considerable, because I thought of +her children, and wished to hoard up treasures for them. Poor, +poor Laurence!" + +M. Lecoq fidgeted in his chair, rubbed his face with his +handkerchief, and seemed ill at ease. He was really much more +touched than he wished to appear. + +"One day," pursued the old man, "my friend Courtois spoke to me of +her marriage with Tremorel; then I measured the depth of my love. +I felt terrible agonies which it is impossible to describe; it was +like a long-smothered fire which suddenly breaks forth and devours +everything. To be old, and to love a child! I thought I was +going crazy; I tried to reason, to upbraid myself, but it was of +no avail. What can reason or irony do against passion? I kept +silent and suffered. To crown all, Laurence selected me as her +confidant--what torture! She came to me to talk of Hector; she +admired in him all that seemed to her superior to other men, so +that none could be compared with him. She was enchanted with his +bold horseback riding, and thought everything he said sublime." + +"Did you know what a wretch Tremorel was?" + +"Alas, I did not yet know it. What was this man who lived at +Valfeuillu to me? But from the day that I learned that he was +going to deprive me of my most precious treasure, I began to +study him. I should have been somewhat consoled if I had found +him worthy of her; so I dogged him, as you, Monsieur Lecoq, cling +to the criminal whom you are pursuing. I went often to Paris to +learn what I could of his past life; I became a detective, and +went about questioning everybody who had known him, and the more +I heard of him the more I despised him. It was thus that I found +out his interviews with Jenny and his relations with Bertha." + +"Why didn't you divulge them?" + +"Honor commanded silence. Had I a right to dishonor my friend and +ruin his happiness and life, because of this ridiculous, hopeless +love? I kept my own counsel after speaking to Courtois about Jenny, +at which he only laughed. When I hinted something against Hector +to Laurence, she almost ceased coming to see me." + +"Ah! I shouldn't have had either your patience or your generosity." + +"Because you are not as old as I, Monsieur Lecoq. Oh, I cruelly +hated this Tremorel! I said to myself, when I saw three women of +such different characters smitten with him, 'what is there in him +to be so loved?'" + +"Yes," answered M. Lecoq, responding to a secret thought, "women +often err; they don't judge men as we do." + +"Many a time," resumed the justice of the peace, "I thought of +provoking him to fight with me, that I might kill him; but then +Laurence would not have looked at me any more. However, I should +perhaps have spoken at last, had not Sauvresy fallen ill and died. +I knew that he had made his wife and Tremorel swear to marry each +other; I knew that a terrible reason forced them to keep their +oath; and I thought Laurence saved. Alas, on the contrary she was +lost! One evening, as I was passing the mayor's house, I saw a +man getting over the wall into the garden; it was Tremorel. I +recognized him perfectly. I was beside myself with rage, and swore +that I would wait and murder him. I did wait, but he did not come +out that night." + +M. Plantat hid his face in his bands; his heart bled at the +recollection of that night of anguish, the whole of which he had +passed in waiting for a man in order to kill him. M. Lecoq trembled +with indignation. + +"This Tremorel," cried he, "is the most abominable of scoundrels. +There is no excuse for his infamies and crimes. And yet you want +to save him from trial, the galleys, the scaffold which await him." + +The old man paused a moment before replying. Of the thoughts which +now crowded tumultuously in his mind, he did not know which to +utter first. Words seemed powerless to betray his sensations; he +wanted to express all that he felt in a single sentence. + +"What matters Tremorel to me?" said he at last. "Do you think I +care about him? I don't care whether he lives or dies, whether he +succeeds in flying or ends his life some morning in the Place +Roquette." + +"Then why have you such a horror of a trial?" + +"Because--" + +"Are you a friend to his family, and anxious to preserve the great +name which he has covered with mud and devoted to infamy?" + +"No, but I am anxious for Laurence, my friend; the thought of her +never leaves me." + +"But she is not his accomplice; she is totally ignorant--there's +no doubt of it--that he has killed his wife." + +"Yes," resumed M. Plantat, "Laurence is innocent; she is only the +victim of an odious villain. It is none the less true, though, +that she would be more cruelly punished than he. If Tremorel is +brought before the court, she will have to appear too, as a witness +if not as a prisoner. And who knows that her truth will not be +suspected? She will be asked whether she really had no knowledge +of the project to murder Bertha, and whether she did not encourage +it. Bertha was her rival; it were natural to suppose that she +hated her. If I were the judge I should not hesitate to include +Laurence in the indictment." + +"With our aid she will prove victoriously that she was ignorant of +all, and has been outrageously deceived." + +"May be; but will she be any the less dishonored and forever lost? +Must she not, in that case, appear in public, answer the judge's +questions, and narrate the story of her shame and misfortunes? +Must not she say where, when, and how she fell, and repeat the +villain's words to her? Can you imagine that of her own free will +she compelled herself to announce her suicide at the risk of +killing her parents with grief? No. Then she must explain what +menaces forced her to do this, which surely was not her own idea. +And worse than all, she will be compelled to confess her love for +Tremorel." + +"No," answered the detective. "Let us not exaggerate anything. +You know as well as I do that justice is most considerate with the +innocent victims of affairs of this sort." + +"Consideration? Eh! Could justice protect her, even if it would, +from the publicity in which trials are conducted? You might touch +the magistrates' hearts; but there are fifty journalists who, since +this crime, have been cutting their pens and getting their paper +ready. Do you think that, to please us, they would suppress the +scandalous proceedings which I am anxious to avoid, and which the +noble name of the murderer would make a great sensation? Does not +this case unite every feature which gives success to judicial +dramas? Oh, there's nothing wanting, neither unworthy passion, +nor poison, nor vengeance, nor murder. Laurence represents in it +the romantic and sentimental element; she--my darling girl--will +become a heroine of the assizes; it is she who will attract the +readers of the Police Gazette; the reporters will tell when she +blushes and when she weeps; they will rival each other in describing +her toilet and bearing. Then there will be the photographers +besieging her, and if she refuses to sit, portraits of some hussy +of the street will be sold as hers. She will yearn to hide herself-- +but where? Can a few locks and bars shelter her from eager +curiosity? She will become famous. What shame and misery! If she +is to be saved, Monsieur Lecoq, her name must not be spoken. I ask +of you, is it possible? Answer me." + +The old man was very violent, yet his speech was simple, devoid of +the pompous phrases of passion. Anger lit up his eyes with a +strange fire; he seemed young again--he loved, and defended his +beloved. + +M. Lecoq was silent; his companion insisted. + +"Answer me." + +"Who knows?" + +"Why seek to mislead me? Haven't I as well as you had experience +in these things? If Tremorel is brought to trial, all is over with +Laurence: And I love her! Yes, I dare to confess it to you, and +let you see the depth of my grief, I love her now as I have never +loved her. She is dishonored, an object of contempt, perhaps still +adores this wretch--what matters it? I love her a thousand times +more than before her fall, for then I loved her without hope, while +now--" + +He stopped, shocked at what he was going to say. His eyes fell +before M. Lecoq's steady gaze, and he blushed for this shameful yet +human hope that he had betrayed. + +"You know all, now," resumed he, in a calmer tone; "consent to aid +me, won't you? Ah, if you only would, I should not think I had +repaid you were I to give you half my fortune--and I am rich--" + +M. Lecoq stopped him with a haughty gesture. + +"Enough, Monsieur Plantat," said he, in a bitter tone, "I can do a +service to a person whom I esteem, love and pity with all my soul; +but I cannot sell such a service." + +"Believe that I did not wish--" + +"Yes, yes, you wished to pay me. Oh, don't excuse yourself, don't +deny it. There are professions, I know, in which manhood and +integrity seem to count for nothing. Why offer me money? What +reason have you for judging me so mean as to sell my favors? You +are like the rest, who can't fancy what a man in my position is. +If I wanted to be rich--richer than you--I could be so in a +fortnight. Don't you see that I hold in my hands the honor and +lives of fifty people? Do you think I tell all I know? I have +here," added he, tapping his forehead, "twenty secrets that I could +sell to-morrow, if I would, for a plump hundred thousand apiece." + +He was indignant, but beneath his anger a certain sad resignation +might be perceived. He had often to reject such offers. + +"If you go and resist this prejudice established for ages, and say +that a detective is honest and cannot be otherwise, that he is +tenfold more honest than any merchant or notary, because he has +tenfold the temptations, without the benefits of his honesty; if +you say this, they'll laugh in your face. I could get together +to-morrow, with impunity, without any risk, at least a million. +Who would mistrust it? I have a conscience, it's true; but a +little consideration for these things would not be unpleasant. +When it would be so easy for me to divulge what I know of those +who have been obliged to trust me, or things which I have surprised, +there is perhaps a merit in holding my tongue. And still, the +first man who should come along to-morrow--a defaulting banker, +a ruined merchant, a notary who has gambled on change--would +feel himself compromised by walking up the boulevard with me! A +policeman--fie! But old Tabaret used to say to me, that the +contempt of such people was only one form of fear." + +M. Plantat was dismayed. How could he, a man of delicacy, prudence +and finesse, have committed such an awkward mistake? He had just +cruelly wounded this man, who was so well disposed toward him, and +he had everything to fear from his resentment. + +"Far be it from me, dear friend," he commenced, "to intend the +offence you imagine. You have misunderstood an insignificant +phrase, which I let escape carelessly, and had no meaning at all." + +M. Lecoq grew calmer. + +"Perhaps so. You will forgive my being so susceptible, as I am +more exposed to insults than most people. Let's leave the subject, +which is a painful one, and return to Tremorel." + +M. Plantat was just thinking whether he should dare to broach his +projects again, and he was singularly touched by M. Lecoq's +delicately resuming the subject of them. + +"I have only to await your decision," said the justice of the peace. + +"I will not conceal from you," resumed M. Lecoq, "that you are +asking a very difficult thing, and one which is contrary to my duty, +which commands me to search for Tremorel, to arrest him, and deliver +him up to justice. You ask me to protect him from the law--" + +"In the name of an innocent creature whom you will thereby save." + +"Once in my life I sacrificed my duty. I could not resist the +tears of a poor old mother, who clung to my knees and implored +pardon for her son. To-day I am going to exceed my right, and to +risk an attempt for which my conscience will perhaps reproach me. +I yield to your entreaty." + +"Oh, my dear Lecoq, how grateful I am!" cried M. Plantat, +transported with joy. + +But the detective remained grave, almost sad, and reflected. + +"Don't let us encourage a hope which may be disappointed," he +resumed. "I have but one means of keeping a criminal like Tremorel +out of the courts; will it succeed?" + +"Yes, yes. If you wish it, it will!" + +M. Lecoq could not help smiling at the old man's faith. + +"I am certainly a clever detective," said he. "But I am only a man +after all, and I can't answer for the actions of another man. All +depends upon Hector. If it were another criminal, I should say I +was sure. I am doubtful about him, I frankly confess. We ought, +above all, to count upon the firmness of Mademoiselle Courtois; +can we, think you?" + +"She is firmness itself." + +"Then there's hope. But can we really suppress this affair? What +will happen when Sauvresy's narrative is found? It must be +concealed somewhere in Valfeuillu, and Tremorel, at least, did not +find it." + +"It will not be found," said M. Plantat, quickly. + +"You think so?" + +"I am sure of it." + +M. Lecoq gazed intently at his companion, and simply said: + +"Ah!" + +But this is what he thought: "At last I am going to find out where +the manuscript which we heard read the other night, and which is +in two handwritings, came from." + +After a moment's hesitation, M. Plantat went on: + +"I have put my life in your hands, Monsieur Lecoq; I can, of +course, confide my honor to you. I know you. I know that, happen +what may--" + +"I shall keep my mouth shut, on my honor." + +"Very well. The day that I caught Tremorel at the mayor's, I +wished to verify the suspicions I had, and so I broke the seal of +Sauvresy's package of papers." + +"And you did not use them?" + +"I was dismayed at my abuse of confidence. Besides, had I the right +to deprive poor Sauvresy, who was dying in order to avenge himself, +of his vengeance?" + +"But you gave the papers to Madame de Tremorel?" + +"True; but Bertha had a vague presentiment of the fate that was in +store for her. About a fortnight before her death she came and +confided to me her husband's manuscript, which she had taken care +to complete. I broke the seals and read it, to see if he had died +a violent death." + +"Why, then, didn't you tell me? Why did you let me hunt, hesitate, +grope about--" + +"I love Laurence, Monsieur Lecoq, and to deliver up Tremorel was to +open an abyss between her and me." + +The detective bowed. "The deuce," thought he, "the old justice is +shrewd--as shrewd as I am. Well, I like him, and I'm going to give +him a surprise." + +M. Plantat yearned to question his host and to know what the sole +means of which he spoke were, which might be successful in preventing +a trial and saving Laurence, but he did not dare to do so. + +The detective bent over his desk lost in thought. He held a pencil +in his hand and mechanically drew fantastic figures on a large sheet +of white paper which lay before him. He suddenly came out of his +revery. He had just solved a last difficulty; his plan was now +entire and complete. He glanced at the clock. + +"Two o'clock," cried he, "and I have an appointment between three +and four with Madame Charman about Jenny." + +"I am at your disposal," returned his guest. + +"All right. When Jenny is disposed of we must look after Tremorel; +so let's take our measures to finish it up to-day." + +"What! do you hope to do everything to-day--" + +"Certainly. Rapidity is above all necessary in our profession. It +often takes a month to regain an hour lost. We've a chance now of +catching Hector by surprise; to-morrow it will be too late. Either +we shall have him within four-and-twenty hours or we must change +our batteries. Each of my three men has a carriage and a good +horse; they may be able to finish with the upholsterers within an +hour from now. If I calculate aright, we shall have the address +in an hour, or at most in two hours, and then we will act." + +Lecoq, as he spoke, took a sheet of paper surmounted by his arms out +of his portfolio, and rapidly wrote several lines. + +"See here," said he, "what I've written to one of my lieutenants." + +"MONSIEUR JOB-- +"Get together six or eight of our men at once and take them to the +wine merchant's at the corner of the Rue des Martyrs and the Rue +Lamartine; await my orders there." + +"Why there and not here?" + +"Because we must avoid needless excursions. At the place I have +designated we are only two steps from Madame Charman's and near +Tremorel's retreat; for the wretch has hired his rooms in the +quarter of Notre Dame de Lorette." + +M. Plantat gave an exclamation of surprise. + +"What makes you think that?" + +The detective smiled, as if the question seemed foolish to him. + +"Don't you recollect that the envelope of the letter addressed by +Mademoiselle Courtois to her family to announce her suicide bore +the Paris postmark, and that of the branch office of Rue St. Lazare? +Now listen to this: On leaving her aunt's house, Laurence must have +gone directly to Tremorel's apartments, the address of which he had +given her, and where he had promised to meet her on Thursday morning. +She wrote the letter, then, in his apartments. Can we admit that +she had the presence of mind to post the letter in another quarter +than that in which she was? It is at least probable that she was +ignorant of the terrible reasons which Tremorel had to fear a search +and pursuit. Had Hector foresight enough to suggest this trick to +her? No, for if he wasn't a fool he would have told her to post +the letter somewhere outside of Paris. It is therefore scarcely +possible that it was posted anywhere else than at the nearest +branch office." + +These suppositions were so simple that M. Plantat wondered he had +not thought of them before. But men do not see clearly in affairs +in which they are deeply interested; passion dims the eyes, as heat +in a room dims a pair of spectacles. He had lost, with his +coolness, a part of his clearsightedness. His anxiety was very +great; for he thought M. Lecoq had a singular mode of keeping his +promise. + +"It seems to me," he could not help remarking, "that if you wish +to keep Hector from trial, the men you have summoned together will +be more embarrassing than useful." + +M. Lecoq thought that his guest's tone and look betrayed a certain +doubt, and was irritated by it. + +"Do you distrust me, Monsieur Plantat?" + +The old man tried to protest. + +"Believe me--" + +"You have my word," resumed M. Lecoq, "and if you knew me better +you would know that I always keep it when I have given it. I have +told you that I would do my best to save Mademoiselle Laurence; but +remember that I have promised you my assistance, not absolute +success. Let me, then, take such measures as I think best." + +So saying, he rang for Janouille. + +"Here's a letter," said he when she appeared, "which must be sent +to Job at once." + +"I will carry it." + +"By no means. You will be pleased to remain here and wait for the +men that I sent out this morning. As they come in, send them to +the wine merchant's at the corner of the Rue des Martyrs; you know +it--opposite the church. They'll find a numerous company there." + +As he gave his orders, he took off his gown, assumed a long black +coat, and carefully adjusted his wig. + +"Will Monsieur be back this evening?" asked Janouille. + +"I don't know." + +"And if anybody comes from over yonder?" + +"Over yonder" with a detective, always means "the house"--otherwise +the prefecture of police. + +"Say that I am out on the Corbeil affair." + +M. Lecoq was soon ready. He had the air, physiognomy, and manners +of a highly respectable chief clerk of fifty. Gold spectacles, an +umbrella, everything about him exhaled an odor of the ledger. + +"Now," said he to M. Plantat. "Let's hurry away." Goulard, who +had made a hearty breakfast, was waiting for his hero in the +dining-room. + +"Ah ha, old fellow," said M. Lecoq. "So you've had a few words +with my wine. How do you find it?" + +"Delicious, my chief; perfect--that is to say, a true nectar." + +"It's cheered you up, I hope." + +"Oh, yes, my chief." + +"Then you may follow us a few steps and mount guard at the door of +the house where you see us go in. I shall probably have to confide +a pretty little girl to your care whom you will carry to Monsieur +Domini. And open your eyes; for she's a sly creature, and very +apt to inveigle you on the way and slip through your fingers." + +They went out, and Janouille stoutly barricaded herself behind them. + + + + +XXV + +Whosoever needs a loan of money, or a complete suit of clothes in +the top of the fashion, a pair of ladies' boots, or an Indian +cashmere; a porcelain table service or a good picture; whosoever +desires diamonds, curtains, laces, a house in the country, or a +provision of wood for winter fires--may procure all these, and +many other things besides, at Mme. Charman's. + +Mme. Charman lives at 136, Rue Notre Dame de Lorette, on the +first story above the ground-floor. Her customers must give madame +some guarantee of their credit; a woman, if she be young and pretty, +may be accommodated at madame's at the reasonable rate of two +hundred per cent interest. Madame has, at these rates, considerable +custom, and yet has not made a large fortune. She must necessarily +risk a great deal, and bears heavy losses as well as receives large +profits. Then she is, as she is pleased to say, too honest; and +true enough, she is honest--she would rather sell her dress off her +back than let her signature go to protest. + +Madame is a blonde, slight, gentle, and not wanting in a certain +distinction of manner; she invariably wears, whether it be summer +or winter, a black silk dress. They say she has a husband, but no +one has ever seen him, which does not prevent his reputation for +good conduct from being above suspicion. However, honorable as may +be Mme. Charman's profession, she has more than once had business +with M. Lecoq; she has need of him and fears him as she does fire. +She, therefore, welcomed the detective and his companion--whom she +took for one of his colleagues--somewhat as the supernumerary of a +theatre would greet his manager if the latter chanced to pay him a +visit in his humble lodgings. + +She was expecting them. When they rang, she advanced to meet them +in the ante-chamber, and greeted M. Lecoq graciously and smilingly. +She conducted them into her drawing-room, invited them to sit in +her best arm-chairs, and pressed some refreshments upon them. + +"I see, dear Madame," began M. Lecoq, "that you have received my +little note." + +"Yes, Monsieur Lecoq, early this morning; I was not up." + +"Very good. And have you been so kind as to do the service I asked?" + +"How can you ask me, when you know that I would go through the fire +for you? I set about it at once, getting up expressly for the +purpose." + +"Then you've got the address of Pelagie Taponnet, called Jenny?" + +"Yes, I have," returned Mme. Charman, with an obsequious bow. "If +I were the kind of woman to magnify my services, I would tell you +what trouble it cost me to find this address, and how I ran all +over Paris and spent ten francs in cab hire." + +"Well, let's come to the point." + +"The truth is, I had the pleasure of seeing Miss Jenny day before +yesterday." + +"You are joking!" + +"Not the least in the world. And let me tell you that she is a +very courageous and honest girl." + +"Really!" + +"She is, indeed. Why, she has owed me four hundred and eighty +francs for two years. I hardly thought the debt worth much, as +you may imagine. But Jenny came to me day before yesterday all out +of breath and told me that she had inherited some money, and had +brought me what she owed me. And she was not joking, either; for +her purse was full of bank notes, and she paid me the whole of my +bill. She's a good girl!" added Mme. Charman, as if profoundly +convinced of the truth of her encomium. + +M. Lecoq exchanged a significant glance with the old justice; the +same idea struck them both at the same moment. These bank-notes +could only be the payment for some important service rendered by +Jenny to Tremorel. M. Lecoq, however, wished for more precise +information. + +"What was Jenny's condition before this windfall?" asked he. + +"Ah, Monsieur Lecoq, she was in a dreadful condition. Since the +count deserted her she has been constantly falling lower and lower. +She sold all she had piece by piece. At last, she mixed with the +worst kind of people, drank absinthe, they say, and had nothing to +put to her back. When she got any money she spent it on a parcel +of hussies instead of buying clothes." + +"And where is she living?" + +"Right by, in a house in the Rue Vintimille." + +"If that is so," replied M. Lecoq, severely, "I am astonished that +she is not here." + +"It's not my fault, dear Monsieur Lecoq; I know where the nest is, +but not where the bird is. She was away this morning when I sent +for her." + +"The deuce! But then--it's very annoying; I must hunt her up at +once." + +"You needn't disturb yourself. Jenny ought to return before four +o'clock, and one of my girls is waiting for her with orders to +bring her here as soon as she comes in, without even letting her go +up to her room." + +"We'll wait for her then." + +M. Lecoq and his friend waited about a quarter of an hour, when Mme. +Charman suddenly got up. + +"I hear my girl's step on the stairs," said she. + +"Listen to me," answered M. Lecoq, "if it is she, manage to make +Jenny think that it was you who sent for her; we will seem to have +come in by the merest chance." + +Mme. Charman responded by a gesture of assents. She was going +towards the door when the detective detained her by the arm. + +"One word more. When you see me fairly engaged in conversation with +her, please be so good as to go and overlook your work-people in +the shops. What I have to say will not interest you in the least." + +"I understand." + +"But no trickery, you know. I know where the closet of your bedroom +is, well enough to be sure that everything that is said here may be +overheard in it." + +Mme. Charman's emissary opened the door; there was a loud rustling +of silks along the corridor; and Jenny appeared in all her glory. +She was no longer the fresh and pretty minx whom Hector had known-- +the provoking large-eyed Parisian demoiselle, with haughty head +and petulant grace. A single year had withered her, as a too hot +summer does the roses, and had destroyed her fragile beauty beyond +recall. She was not twenty, and still it was hard to discern that +she had been charming, and was yet young. For she had grown old +like vice; her worn features and hollow cheeks betrayed the +dissipations of her life; her eyes had lost their long, languishing +lids; her mouth had a pitiful expression of stupefaction; and +absinthe had broken the clear tone of her voice. She was richly +dressed in a new robe, with a great deal of lace and a jaunty hat; +yet she had a wretched expression; she was all besmeared with +rouge and paint. + +When she came in she seemed very angry. + +"What an idea!" she cried, without taking the trouble to bow to +anyone; "what sense is there in sending for me to come here in +this way, almost by force, and by a very impudent young woman?" + +Mme. Charman hastened to meet her old customer, embraced her in +spite of herself, and pressed her to her heart. + +"Why, don't be so angry, dear--I thought you would be delighted +and overwhelm me with thanks." + +"I? What for?" + +"Because, my dear girl, I had a surprise in store for you. Ah, I'm +not ungrateful; you came here yesterday and settled your account +with me, and to-day I mean to reward you for it. Come, cheer up; +you're going to have a splendid chance, because just at this moment +I happen to have a piece of exquisite velvet--" + +"A pretty thing to bring me here for!" + +"All silk, my dear, at thirty francs the yard. Ha, 'tis wonderfully +cheap, the best--" + +"Eh! What care I for your 'chance?' Velvet in July--are you +making fun of me?" + +"Let me show it to you, now." + +"Never! I am expected to dinner at Asnieres, and so--" + +She was about to go away despite Mme. Charman's attempts to detain +her, when M. Lecoq thought it was time to interfere. + +"Why, am I mistaken?" cried he, as if amazed; "is it really Miss +Jenny whom I have the honor of seeing?" + +She scanned him with a half-angry, half-surprised air, and said: + +"Yes, it is I; what of it?" + +"What! Are you so forgetful? Don't you recognize me?" + +"No, not at all." + +"Yet I was one of your admirers once, my dear, and used to breakfast +with you when you lived near the Madeleine; in the count's time, +you know." + +He took off his spectacles as if to wipe them, but really to launch +a furious look at Mme. Charman, who, not daring to resist, beat a +hasty retreat. + +"I knew Tremorel well in other days," resumed the detective. "And-- +by the bye, have you heard any news of him lately?" + +"I saw him about a week ago." + +"Stop, though--haven't you heard of that horrible affair?" + +"No. What was it?" + +"Really, now, haven't you heard? Don't you read the papers? It +was a dreadful thing, and has been the talk of all Paris for the +past forty-eight hours." + +"Tell me about it, quick!" + +"You know that he married the widow of one of his friends. He was +thought to be very happy at home; not at all; he has murdered his +wife with a knife." + +Jenny grew pale under her paint. + +"Is it possible?" stammered she. She seemed much affected, but not +very greatly surprised, which M. Lecoq did not fail to remark. + +"It is so possible," he resumed, "that he is at this moment in +prison, will soon be tried, and without a doubt will be convicted." + +M. Plantat narrowly observed Jenny; he looked for an explosion of +despair, screams, tears, at least a light nervous attack; he was +mistaken. + +Jenny now detested Tremorel. Sometimes she felt the weight of her +degradation, and she accused Hector of her present ignominy. She +heartily hated him, though she smiled when she saw him, got as much +money out of him as she could, and cursed him behind his back. +Instead of bursting into tears, she therefore laughed aloud. + +"Well done for Tremorel," said she. "Why did he leave me? Good +for her too." + +"Why so?" + +"What did she deceive her husband for? It was she who took Hector +from me--she, a rich, married woman! But I've always said Hector +was a poor wretch." + +"Frankly, that's my notion too. When a man acts as Tremorel has +toward you, he's a villain." + +"It's so, isn't it?" + +"Parbleu! But I'm not surprised at his conduct. For his wife's +murder is the least of his crimes; why, he tried to put it off upon +somebody else!" + +"That doesn't surprise me." + +"He accused a poor devil as innocent as you or I, who might have +been condemned to death if he hadn't been able to tell where he +was on Wednesday night." + +M. Lecoq said this lightly, with intended deliberation, so as to +watch the impression he produced on Jenny. + +"Do you know who the man was?" asked she in a tremulous voice. + +"The papers said it was a poor lad who was his gardener." + +"A little man, wasn't he, thin, very dark, with black hair?" + +"Just so." + +"And whose name was--wait now--was--Guespin." + +"Ah ha, you know him then?" + +Jenny hesitated. She was trembling very much, and evidently +regretted that she had gone so far. + +"Bah!" said she at last. "I don't see why I shouldn't tell what I +know. I'm an honest girl, if Tremorel is a rogue; and I don't want +them to condemn a poor wretch who is innocent." + +"You know something about it, then?" + +"Well, I know nearly all about it--that's honest, ain't it? About +a week ago Hector wrote to me to meet him at Melun; I went, found +him, and we breakfasted together. Then he told me that he was very +much annoyed about his cook's marriage; for one of his servants was +deeply in love with her, and might go and raise a rumpus at the +wedding." + +"Ah, he spoke to you about the wedding, then?" + +"Wait a minute. Hector seemed very much embarrassed, not knowing +how to avoid the disturbance he feared. Then I advised him to send +the servant off out of the way on the wedding-day. He thought a +moment, and said that my advice was good. He added that he had +found a means of doing this; on the evening of the marriage he +would send the man on an errand for me, telling him that the affair +was to be concealed from the countess. I was to dress up--as a +chambermaid, and wait for the man at the cafe in the Place du +Chatelet, between half-past nine and ten that evening; I was to sit +at the table nearest the entrance on the right, with a bouquet in +my hand, so that he should recognize me. He would come in and give +me a package; then I was to ask him to take something, and so get +him tipsy if possible, and then walk about Paris with him till +morning." + +Jenny expressed herself with difficulty, hesitating, choosing her +words, and trying to remember exactly what Tremorel said. + +"And you," interrupted M. Lecoq, "did you believe all this story +about a jealous servant?" + +"Not quite; but I fancied that he had some intrigue on foot, and I +wasn't sorry to help him deceive a woman whom I detested, and who +had wronged me." + +"So you did as he told you?" + +"Exactly, from beginning to end; everything happened just as Hector +had foreseen. The man came along at just ten o'clock, took me for +a maid, and gave me the package. I naturally offered him a glass +of beer; he took it and proposed another, which I also accepted. +He is a very nice fellow, this gardener, and I passed a very +pleasant evening with him. He knew lots of queer things, and--" + +"Never mind that. What did you do then?" + +"After the beer we had some wine, then some beer again, then some +punch, then some more wine--the gardener had his pockets full of +money. He was very tipsy by eleven and invited me to go and have +a dance with him at the Batignolles. I refused, and asked him to +escort me back to my mistress at the upper end of the Champs +Elysees. We went out of the cafe and walked up the Rue de Rivoli, +stopping every now and then for more wine and beer. By two o'clock +the fellow was so far gone that he fell like a lump on a bench near +the Arc de Triomphe, where he went to sleep; and there I left him." + +"Well, where did you go?" + +"Home." + +"What has become of the package?" + +"Oh, I intended to throw it into the Seine, as Hector wished, but +I forgot it; you see, I had drunk almost as much as the gardener-- +so I carried it back home with me, and it is in my room now." + +"Have you opened it?" + +"Well--what do you think?" + +"What did it contain?" + +"A hammer, two other tools and a large knife." + +Guespin's innocence was now evident, and the detective's foresight +was realized. + +"Guespin's all right," said M. Plantat. "But we must know--" + +M. Lecoq interrupted him; he knew now all he wished. Jenny could +tell him nothing more, so he suddenly changed his tone from a +wheedling one to abrupt severity. + +"My fine young woman," said he, "you have saved an innocent man, +but you must repeat what you have just said to the judge of +instruction at Corbeil. And as you might lose yourself on the way, +I'll give you a guide." + +He went to the window and opened it; perceiving Goulard on the +sidewalk, he cried out to him: + +"Goulard, come up here." + +He turned to the astonished Jenny, who was so frightened that she +dared not either question him or get angry, and said: + +"Tell me how much Tremorel paid you for the service you rendered +him." + +"Ten thousand francs; but it is my due, I swear to you; for he +promised it to me long ago, and owed it to me." + +"Very good; it can't be taken away from you." He added, pointing +out Goulard who entered just then: "Go with this man to your room, +take the package which Guespin brought you, and set out at once for +Corbeil. Above all, no tricks, Miss--or beware of me!" + +Mme. Charman came in just in time to see Jenny leave the room with +Goulard. + +"Lord, what's the matter?" she asked M. Lecoq. + +"Nothing, my dear Madame, nothing that concerns you in the least. +And so, thank you and good-evening; we are in a great hurry." + + + + +XXVI + +When M. Lecoq was in a hurry he walked fast. He almost ran down +the Rue Notre Dame de Lorette, so that Plantat had great +difficulty in keeping up with him; and as he went along he pursued +his train of reflection, half aloud, so that his companion caught +here and there a snatch of it. + +"All goes well," he muttered, "and we shall succeed. It's seldom +that a campaign which commences so well ends badly. If Job is at +the wine merchant's, and if one of my men has succeeded in his +search, the crime of Valfeuillu is solved, and in a week people +will have forgotten it." + +He stopped short on reaching the foot of the street opposite the +church. + +"I must ask you to pardon me," said he to the old justice, "for +hurrying you on so and making you one of my trade; but your +assistance might have been very useful at Madame Charman's, and +will be indispensable when we get fairly on Tremorel's track." + +They went across the square and into the wine shop at the corner of +the Rue des Martyrs. Its keeper was standing behind his counter +turning wine out of a large jug into some litres, and did not seem +much astonished at seeing his new visitors. M. Lecoq was quite at +home (as he was everywhere), and spoke to the man with an air of +easy familiarity. + +"Aren't there six or eight men waiting for somebody here?" he asked. + +"Yes, they came about an hour ago." + +"Are they in the big back room?" + +"Just so, Monsieur," responded the wine merchant, obsequiously. + +He didn't exactly know who was talking to him, but he suspected him +to be some superior officer from the prefecture; and he was not +surprised to see that this distinguished personage knew the ins and +outs of his house. He opened the door of the room referred to +without hesitation. Ten men in various guises were drinking there +and playing cards. On M. Lecoq's entrance with M. Plantat, they +respectfully got up and took off their hats. + +"Good for you, Job," said M. Lecoq to him who seemed to be their +chief, "you are prompt, and it pleases me. Your ten men will be +quite enough, for I shall have the three besides whom I sent out +this morning." + +M. Job bowed, happy at having pleased a master who was not very +prodigal in his praises. + +"I want you to wait here a while longer," resumed M. Lecoq, "for my +orders will depend on a report which I am expecting." He turned to +the men whom he had sent out among the upholsterers: + +"Which of you was successful?" + +"I, Monsieur," replied a big white-faced fellow, with insignificant +mustaches. + +"What, you again, Palot? really, my lad, you are lucky. Step into +this side room--first, though, order a bottle of wine, and ask the +proprietor to see to it that we are not disturbed." + +These orders were soon executed, and M. Plantat being duly ensconced +with them in the little room, the detective turned the key. + +"Speak up now," said he to Palot, "and be brief." + +"I showed the photograph to at least a dozen upholsterers without +any result; but at last a merchant in the Faubourg St. Germain, +named Rech, recognized it." + +"Tell me just what he said, if you can." + +"He told me that it was the portrait of one of his customers. A +month ago this customer came to him to buy a complete set of +furniture--drawing-room, dining-room, bed-room, and the rest--for +a little house which he had just rented. He did not beat him down +at all, and only made one condition to the purchase, and that was, +that everything should be ready and in place, and the curtains and +carpets put in, within three weeks from that time; that is a week +ago last Monday." + +"And what was the sum-total of the purchase?" + +"Eighteen thousand francs, half paid down in advance, and half on +the day of delivery." + +"And who carried the last half of the money to the upholsterer?" + +"A servant." + +"What name did this customer give?" + +"He called himself Monsieur James Wilson; but Monsieur Rech said +he did not seem like an English-man." + +"Where does he live?" + +"The furniture was carried to a small house, No. 34 Rue St. Lazare, +near the Havre station." + +M. Lecoq's face, which had up to that moment worn an anxious +expression, beamed with joy. He felt the natural pride of a +captain who has succeeded in his plans for the enemy's destruction. +He tapped the old justice of the peace familiarly on the shoulder, +and pronounced a single word: + +"Nipped!" + +Palot shook his head. + +"It isn't certain," said he. + +"Why?" + +"You may imagine, Monsieur Lecoq, that when I got the address, +having some time on my hands, I went to reconnoitre the house." + +"Well?" + +"The tenant's name is really Wilson, but it's not the man of the +photograph, I'm certain." + +M. Plantat gave a groan of disappointment, but M. Lecoq was not so +easily discouraged. + +"How did you find out?" + +"I pumped one of the servants." + +"Confound you!" cried M. Plantat. "Perhaps you roused suspicions." + +"Oh, no," answered M. Lecoq. "I'll answer for him. Palot is a +pupil of mine. Explain yourself, Palot." + +"Recognizing the house--an elegant affair it is, too--I said to +myself: 'I' faith, here's the cage; let's see if the bird is in +it.' I luckily happened to have a napoleon in my pocket; and I +slipped it without hesitation into the drain which led from the +house to the street-gutter." + +"Then you rang?" + +"Exactly. The porter--there is a porter--opened the door, and +with my most vexed air I told him how, in pulling out my +handkerchief, I had dropped a twenty-franc piece in the drain, and +begged him to lend me something to try to get it out. He lent me +a poker and took another himself, and we got the money out with no +difficulty; I began to jump about as if I were delighted, and begged +him to let me treat him to a glass of wine." + +"Not bad." + +"Oh, Monsieur Lecoq, it is one of your tricks, you know. My porter +accepted my invitation, and we soon got to be the best friends in +the world over some wine in a shop just across the street from the +house. We were having a jolly talk together when, all of a sudden, +I leaned over as if I had just espied something on the floor, and +picked up--the photograph, which I had dropped and soiled a little +with my foot. 'What,' cried I, 'a portrait?' My new friend took +it, looked at it, and didn't seem to recognize it. Then, to be +certain, I said, 'He's a very good-looking fellow, ain't he now? +Your master must be some such a man.' But he said no, that the +photograph was of a man who was bearded, while his master was as +clean-faced as an abbe. 'Besides,' he added, 'my master is an +American; he gives us our orders in French, but Madame and he always +talk English together.'" + +M. Lecoq's eye glistened as Palot proceeded. + +"Tremorel speaks English, doesn't he?" asked he of M. Plantat. + +"Quite well; and Laurence too." + +"If that is so, we are on the right track, for we know that Tremorel +shaved his beard off on the night of the murder. We can go on--" + +Palot meanwhile seemed a little uneasy at not receiving the praise +he expected. + +"My lad," said M. Lecoq, turning to him, "I think you have done +admirably, and a good reward shall prove it to you. Being ignorant +of what we know, your conclusions were perfectly right. But let's +go to the house at once; have you got a plan of the ground-floor?" + +"Yes, and also of the first floor above. The porter was not dumb, +and so he gave me a good deal of information about his master and +mistress, though he has only been there two days. The lady is +dreadfully melancholy, and cries all the time." + +"We know it; the plan--" + +"Below, there is a large and high paved arch for the carriages to +pass through; on the other side is a good-sized courtyard, at the +end of which are the stable and carriage-house. The porter's lodge +is on the left of the arch; on the right a glass door opens on a +staircase with six steps, which conducts to a vestibule into which +the drawing-room, dining-room, and two other little rooms open. +The chambers are on the first floor, a study, a--" + +"Enough," M. Lecoq said, "my plan is made." + +And rising abruptly, he opened the door, and followed by M. Plantat +and Palot, went into the large room. All the men rose at his +approach as before. + +"Monsieur Job," said the detective, "listen attentively to what I +have to say. As soon as I am gone, pay up what you owe here, and +then, as I must have you all within reach, go and install yourselves +in the first wine-shop on the right as you go up the Rue d'Amsterdam. +Take your dinner there, for you will have time--but soberly, you +understand." + +He took two napoleons out of his pocket and placed them on the +table, adding: + +"That's for the dinner." + +M. Lecoq and the old justice went into the street, followed closely +by Palot. The detective was anxious above all to see for himself +the house inhabited by Tremorel. He saw at a glance that the +interior must be as Palot had described. + +"That's it, undoubtedly," said he to M. Plantat; "we've got the +game in our hands. Our chances at this moment are ninety to ten." + +"What are you going to do?" asked the justice, whose emotion +increased as the decisive moment approached. + +"Nothing, just yet, I must wait for night before I act. As it is +two hours yet before dark, let's imitate my men; I know a restaurant +just by here where you can dine capitally; we'll patronize it." + +And without awaiting a reply, he led M. Plantat to a restaurant in +the Passage du Havre. But at the moment he was about to open the +door, he stopped and made a signal. Palot immediately appeared. + +"I give you two hours to get yourself up so that the porter won't +recognize you, and to have some dinner. You are an upholsterer's +apprentice. Now clear out; I shall wait for you here." + +M. Lecoq was right when he said that a capital dinner was to be +had in the Passage du Havre; unfortunately M. Plantat was not in a +state to appreciate it. As in the morning, he found it difficult +to swallow anything, he was so anxious and depressed. He longed to +know the detective's plans; but M. Lecoq remained impenetrable, +answering all inquiries with: + +"Let me act, and trust me." + +M. Plantat's confidence was indeed very great; but the more he +reflected, the more perilous and difficult seemed the attempt to +save Tremorel from a trial. The most poignant doubts troubled and +tortured his mind. His own life was at stake; for he had sworn to +himself that he would not survive the ruin of Laurence in being +forced to confess in full court her dishonor and her love for +Hector. + +M. Lecoq tried hard to make his companion eat something, to take at +least some soup and a glass of old Bordeaux; but he soon saw the +uselessness of his efforts and went on with his dinner as if he +were alone. He was very thoughtful, but any uncertainty of the +result of his plans never entered his head. He drank much and +often, and soon emptied his bottle of Leoville. Night having now +come on the waiters began to light the chandeliers, and the two +friends found themselves almost alone. + +"Isn't it time to begin?" asked the old justice, timidly. + +"We have still nearly an hour," replied M. Lecoq, consulting his +watch; "but I shall make my preparations now." + +He called a waiter, and ordered a cup of coffee and writing +materials. + +"You see," said he, while they were waiting to be served, "we must +try to get at Laurence without Tremorel's knowing it. We must have +a ten minutes' talk with her alone, and in the house. That is a +condition absolutely necessary to our success." + +M. Plantat had evidently been expecting some immediate and decisive +action, for M. Lecoq's remark filled him with alarm. + +"If that's so," said he mournfully, "it's all over with our +project." + +"How so?" + +"Because Tremorel will not leave Laurence by herself for a moment." + +"Then I'll try to entice him out." + +"And you, you who are usually so clear-sighted, really think that +he will let himself be taken in by a trick! You don't consider his +situation at this moment. He must be a prey to boundless terrors. +We know that Sauvresy's declaration will not be found, but he does +not; he thinks that perhaps it has been found, that suspicions have +been aroused, and that he is already being searched for and pursued +by the police." + +"I've considered all that," responded M. Lecoq with a triumphant +smile, "and many other things besides. Well, it isn't easy to +decoy Tremorel out of the house. I've been cudgelling my brain +about it a good deal, and have found a way at last. The idea +occurred to me just as we were coming in here. The Count de Tremorel, +in an hour from now, will be in the Faubourg St. Germain. It's true +it will cost me a forgery, but you will forgive me under the +circumstances. Besides, he who seeks the end must use the means." + +He took up a pen, and as he smoked his cigar, rapidly wrote the +following: + +"MONSIEUR WILSON: + +"Four of the thousand-franc notes which you paid me are +counterfeits; I have just found it out by sending them to my +banker's. If you are not here to explain the matter before ten +o'clock, I shall be obliged to put in a complaint this evening +before the procureur. + +"RECH." + +"Now," said M. Lecoq, passing the letter to his companion. "Do you +comprehend?" + +The old justice read it at a glance and could not repress a joyful +exclamation, which caused the waiters to turn around and stare at +him. + +"Yes," said he, "this letter will catch him; it'll frighten him out +of all his other terrors. He will say to himself that he might +have slipped some counterfeit notes among those paid to the +upholsterer, that a complaint against him will provoke an inquiry, +and that he will have to prove that he is really Monsieur Wilson +or he is lost." + +"So you think he'll come out?" + +"I'm sure of it, unless he has become a fool." + +"I tell you we shall succeed then, for this is the only serious +obstacle--" + +He suddenly interrupted himself. The restaurant door opened ajar, +and a man passed his head in and withdrew it immediately. + +"That's my man," said M. Lecoq, calling the waiter to pay for the +dinner, "he is waiting for us in the passage; let us go." + +A young man dressed like a journeyman upholsterer was standing in +the passage looking in at the shop-windows. He had long brown +locks, and his mustache and eyebrows were coal-black. M. Plantat +certainly did not recognize him as Palot, but M. Lecoq did, and +even seemed dissatisfied with his get-up. + +"Bad," growled he, "pitiable. Do you think it is enough, in order +to disguise yourself, to change the color of your beard? Look in +that glass, and tell me if the expression of your face is not just +what it was before? Aren't your eye and smile the same? Then your +cap is too much on one side, it is not natural; and your hand is +put in your pocket awkwardly." + +"I'll try to do better another time, Monsieur Lecoq," Palot +modestly replied. + +"I hope so; but I guess your porter won't recognize you to-night, +and that is all we want." + +"And now what must I do?" + +"I'll give you your orders; and be very careful not to blunder. +First, hire a carriage, with a good horse; then go to the wine-shop +for one of our men, who will accompany you to Monsieur Wilson's +house. When you get there ring, enter alone and give the porter +this letter, saying that it is of the utmost importance. This +done, put yourself with your companion in ambuscade before the house. +If Monsieur Wilson goes out--and he will go out or I am not Lecoq-- +send your comrade to me at once. As for you, you will follow +Monsieur Wilson and not lose sight of him. He will take a carriage, +and you will follow him with yours, getting up on the hackman's +seat and keeping a lookout from there. Have your eyes open, for he +is a rascal who may feel inclined to jump out of his cab and leave +you in pursuit of an empty vehicle." + +"Yes, and the moment I am informed--" + +"Silence, please, when I am speaking. He will probably go to the +upholsterer's in the Rue des Saints-Peres, but I may be mistaken. +He may order himself to be carried to one of the railway stations, +and may take the first train which leaves. In this case, you must +get into the same railway carriage that he does, and follow him +everywhere he goes; and be sure and send me a despatch as soon +as you can." + +"Very well, Monsieur Lecoq; only if I have to take a train--" + +"What, haven't you any money?" + +"Well--no, my chief." + +"Then take this five-hundred-franc note; that's more than is +necessary to make the tour of the world. Do you comprehend +everything?" + +"I beg your pardon--what shall I do if Monsieur Wilson simply +returns to his house?" + +"In that case I will finish with him. If he returns, you will come +back with him, and the moment his cab stops before the house give +two loud whistles, you know. Then wait for me in the street, taking +care to retain your cab, which you will lend to Monsieur Plantat if +he needs it." + +"All right," said Palot, who hastened off without more ado. + +M. Plantat and the detective, left alone, began to walk up and down +the gallery; both were grave and silent, as men are at a decisive +moment; there is no chatting about a gaming-table. M. Lecoq +suddenly started; he had just seen his agent at the end of the +gallery. His impatience was so great that he ran toward him, +saying: + +"Well?" + +"Monsieur, the game has flown, and Palot after him!" + +"On foot or in a cab?" + +"In a cab." + +"Enough. Return to your comrades, and tell them to hold themselves +ready." + +Everything was going as Lecoq wished, and he grasped the old +justice's hand, when he was struck by the alteration in his features. + +"What, are you ill?" asked he, anxiously. + +"No, but I am fifty-five years old, Monsieur Lecoq, and at that age +there are emotions which kill one. Look, I am trembling at the +moment when I see my wishes being realized, and I feel as if a +disappointment would be the death of me. I'm afraid, yes, I'm +afraid. Ah, why can't I dispense with following you?" + +"But your presence is indispensable; without your help I can do +nothing:" + +"What could I do?" + +"Save Laurence, Monsieur Plantat." + +This name restored a part of his courage. + +"If that is so--" said he. He began to walk firmly toward the +street, but M. Lecoq stopped him. + +"Not yet," said the detective, "not yet; the battle now depends on +the precision of our movements. A single fault miserably upsets +all my combinations, and then I shall be forced to arrest and +deliver up the criminal. We must have a ten minutes' interview +with Mademoiselle Laurence, but not much more, and it is +absolutely necessary that this interview should be suddenly +interrupted by Tremorel's return. Let's make our calculations. +It will take the rascal half an hour to go to the Rue des +Saints-Peres, where he will find nobody; as long to get back; let +us throw in fifteen minutes as a margin; in all, an hour and a +quarter. There are forty minutes left us." + +M. Plantat did not reply, but his companion said that he could not +stay so long on his feet after the fatigues of the day, agitated +as he was, and having eaten nothing since the evening before. He +led him into a neighboring cafe, and forced him to eat a biscuit and +drink a glass of wine. Then seeing that conversation would be +annoying to the unhappy old man, he took up an evening paper and +soon seemed to be absorbed in the latest news from Germany. The +old justice, his head leaning on the back of his chair and his eyes +wandering over the ceiling, passed in mental review the events of +the past four years. It seemed to him but yesterday that Laurence, +still a child, ran up his garden-path and picked his roses and +honeysuckles. How pretty she was, and how divine were her great +eyes! Then, as it seemed, between dusk and dawn, as a rose blooms +on a June night, the pretty child had become a sweet and radiant +young girl. She was timid and reserved with all but him--was he +not her old friend, the confidant of all her little griefs and her +innocent hopes? How frank and pure she was then; what a heavenly +ignorance of evil! + +Nine o'clock struck; M. Lecoq laid down his paper. + +"Let us go," said he. + +M. Plantat followed him with a firmer step, and they soon reached +M. Wilson's house, accompanied by Job and his men. + +"You men," said M. Lecoq, "wait till I call before you go in; I +will leave the door ajar." + +He rang; the door swung open; and M. Plantat and the detective went +in under the arch. The porter was on the threshold of his lodge. + +"Monsieur Wilson?" asked M. Lecoq. + +"He is out." + +"I will speak to Madame, then." + +"She is also out." + +"Very well. Only, as I must positively speak with Madame Wilson, +I'm going upstairs." + +The porter seemed about to resist him by force; but, as Lecoq now +called in his men, he thought better of it and kept quiet. + +M. Lecoq posted six of his men in the court, in such a position +that they could be easily seen from the windows on the first floor, +and instructed the others to place themselves on the opposite +sidewalk, telling them to look ostentatiously at the house. These +measures taken, he returned to the porter. + +"Attend to me, my man. When your master, who has gone out, comes +in again, beware that you don't tell him that we are upstairs; a +single word would get you into terribly hot water--" + +"I am blind," he answered, "and deaf." + +"How many servants are there in the house?" + +"Three; but they have all gone out." + +The detective then took M. Plantat by the arm, and holding him +firmly: + +"You see, my dear friend," said he, "the game is ours. Come along-- +and in Laurence's name, have courage!" + + + + +XXVII + +All M. Lecoq's anticipations were realized. Laurence was not dead, +and her letter to her parents was an odious trick. It was really +she who lived in the house as Mme. Wilson. How had the lovely +young girl, so much beloved by the old justice, come to such a +dreadful extremity? The logic of life, alas, fatally enchains all +our determinations to each other. Often an indifferent action, +little wrongful in itself, is the beginning of an atrocious crime. +Each of our new resolutions depends upon those which have preceded +it, and is their logical sequence just as the sum-total is the +product of the added figures. Woe to him who, being seized with a +dizziness at the brink of the abyss, does not fly as fast as +possible, without turning his head; for soon, yielding to an +irresistible attraction, he approaches, braves the danger, slips, +and is lost. Whatever thereafter he does or attempts he will roll +down the faster, until he reaches the very bottom of the gulf. + +Tremorel had by no means the implacable character of an assassin; +he was only feeble and cowardly; yet he had committed abominable +crimes. All his guilt came from the first feeling of envy with +which he regarded Sauvresy, and which he had not taken the pains +to subdue. Laurence, when, on the day that she became enamoured +of Tremorel, she permitted him to press her hand, and kept it from +her mother, was lost. The hand-pressure led to the pretence of +suicide in order to fly with her lover. It might also lead to +infanticide. + +Poor Laurence, when she was left alone by Hector's departure to the +Faubourg St. Germain, on receiving M. Lecoq's letter, began to +reflect upon the events of the past year. How unlooked-for and +rapidly succeeding they had been! It seemed to her that she had +been whirled along in a tempest, without a second to think or act +freely. She asked herself if she were not a prey to some hideous +nightmare, and if she should not presently awake in her pretty +maidenly chamber at Orcival. Was it really she who was there in +a strange house, dead to everyone, leaving behind a withered memory, +reduced to live under a false name, without family or friends +henceforth, or anyone in the world to help her feebleness, at the +mercy of a fugitive like herself, who was free to break to-morrow +the bonds of caprice which to-day bound him to her? Was it she, +too, who was about to become a mother, and found herself suffering +from the excessive misery of blushing for that maternity which is +the pride of pure young wives? A thousand memories of her past +life flocked through her brain and cruelly revived her despair. +Her heart sank as she thought of her old friendships, of her mother, +her sister, the pride of her innocence, and the pure joys of the +home fireside. + +As she half reclined on a divan in Hector's library, she wept +freely. She bewailed her life, broken at twenty, her lost youth, +her vanished, once radiant hopes, the world's esteem, and her own +self-respect, which she should never recover. + +Of a sudden the door was abruptly opened. + +Laurence thought it was Hector returned, and she hastily rose, +passing her handkerchief across her face to try to conceal her +tears. + +A man whom she did not know stood upon the threshold, respectfully +bowing. She was afraid, for Tremorel had said to her many times +within the past two days, "We are pursued; let us hide well;" and +though it seemed to her that she had nothing to fear, she trembled +without knowing why. + +"Who are you?" she asked, haughtily, "and who has admitted you here? +What do you want?" + +M. Lecoq left nothing to chance or inspiration; he foresaw +everything, and regulated affairs in real life as he would the +scenes in a theatre. He expected this very natural indignation and +these questions, and was prepared for them. The only reply he made +was to step one side, thus revealing M. Plantat behind him. + +Laurence was so much overcome on recognizing her old friend, that, +in spite of her resolution, she came near falling. + +"You!" she stammered; "you!" + +The old justice was, if possible, more agitated than Laurence. Was +that really his Laurence there before him? Grief had done its work +so well that she seemed old. + +"Why did you seek for me?" she resumed. "Why add another grief to +my life? Ah, I told Hector that the letter he dictated to me would +not be believed. There are misfortunes for which death is the only +refuge." + +M. Plantat was about to reply, but Lecoq was determined to take the +lead in the interview. + +"It is not you, Madame, that we seek," said he, "but Monsieur de +Tremorel." + +"Hector! And why, if you please? Is he not free?" + +M. Lecoq hesitated before shocking the poor girl, who had been but +too credulous in trusting to a scoundrel's oaths of fidelity. But +he thought that the cruel truth is less harrowing than the suspense +of intimations. + +"Monsieur de Tremorel," he answered, "has committed a great crime." + +"He! You lie, sir." + +The detective sorrowfully shook his head. + +"Unhappily I have told you the truth. Monsieur de Tremorel murdered +his wife on Wednesday night. I am a detective and I have a warrant +to arrest him." + +He thought this terrible charge would overwhelm Laurence; he was +mistaken. She was thunderstruck, but she stood firm. The crime +horrified her, but it did not seem to her entirely improbable, +knowing as she did the hatred with which Hector was inspired by +Bertha. + +"Well, perhaps he did," cried she, sublime in her energy and despair; +"I am his accomplice, then--arrest me." + +This cry, which seemed to proceed from the most senseless passion, +amazed the old justice, but did not surprise M. Lecoq. + +"No, Madame," he resumed, "you are not this man's accomplice. +Besides, the murder of his wife is the least of his crimes. Do you +know why he did not marry you? Because in concert with Bertha, he +poisoned Monsieur Sauvresy, who saved his life and was his best +friend. We have the proof of it." + +This was more than poor Laurence could bear; she staggered and fell +upon a sofa. But she did not doubt the truth of what M. Lecoq said. +This terrible revelation tore away the veil which, till then, had +hidden the past from her. The poisoning of Sauvresy explained all +Hector's conduct, his position, his fears, his promises, his lies, +his hate, his recklessness, his marriage, his flight. Still she +tried not to defend him, but to share the odium of his crimes. + +"I knew it," she stammered, in a voice broken by sobs, "I knew it +all." + +The old justice was in despair. + +"How you love him, poor child!" murmured he. + +This mournful exclamation restored to Laurence all her energy; she +made an effort and rose, her eyes glittering with indignation: + +"I love him!" cried she. "I! Ah, I can explain my conduct to you, +my old friend, for you are worthy of hearing it. Yes, I did love +him, it is true--loved him to the forgetfulness of duty, to +self-abandonment. But one day he showed himself to me as he was; +I judged him, and my love did not survive my contempt. I was +ignorant of Sauvresy's horrible death. Hector confessed to me that +his life and honor were in Bertha's hands--and that she loved him. +I left him free to abandon me, to marry, thus sacrificing more than +my life to what I thought was his happiness; yet I was not deceived. +When I fled with him I once more sacrificed myself, when I saw that +it was impossible to conceal my shame. I wanted to die. I lived, +and wrote an infamous letter to my mother, and yielded to Hector's +prayers, because he pleaded with me in the name of my--of our +child!" + +M. Lecoq, impatient at the loss of time, tried to say something; +but Laurence would not listen to him. + +"But what matter?" she continued. "I loved him, followed him, and +am his: Constancy at all hazards is the only excuse for a fault like +mine. I will do my duty. I cannot be innocent when Hector has +committed a crime; I desire to suffer half the punishment." + +She spoke with such remarkable animation that the detective +despaired of calming her, when two whistles in the street struck +his ear. Tremorel was returning and there was not a moment to be +lost. He suddenly seized Laurence by the arm. + +"You will tell all this to the judges, Madame," said he, sternly. +"My orders are only for M. de Tremorel. Here is the warrant to +arrest him." + +He took out the warrant and laid it upon the table. Laurence, by +the force of her will, had become almost calm. + +"You will let me speak five minutes with the Count de Tremorel, +will you not?" she asked. + +M. Lecoq was delighted; he had looked for this request, and +expected it. + +"Five minutes? Yes," he replied. "But abandon all hope, Madame, +of saving the prisoner; the house is watched; if you look in the +court and in the street you will see my men in ambuscade. Besides, +I am going to stay here in the next room." + +The count was heard ascending the stairs. + +"There's Hector!" cried Laurence, "quick, quick! conceal yourselves!" + +She added, as they were retiring, in a low tone, but not so low as +to prevent the detective from hearing her: + +"Be sure, we will not try to escape." + +She let the door-curtain drop; it was time. Hector entered. He +was paler than death, and his eyes had a fearful, wandering +expression. + +"We are lost!" said he, "they are pursuing us. See, this letter +which I received just now is not from the man whose signature it +professes to bear; he told me so himself. Come, let us go, let +us leave this house--" + +Laurence overwhelmed him with a look full of hate and contempt, +and said: + +"It is too late." + +Her countenance and voice were so strange that Tremorel, despite +his distress, was struck by it, and asked: + +"What is the matter?" + +"Everything is known; it is known that you killed your wife." + +"It's false!" + +She shrugged her shoulders. + +"Well, then, it is true," he added, "for I loved you so--" + +"Really! And it was for love of me that you poisoned Sauvresy?" + +He saw that he was discovered, that he had been caught in a trap, +that they had come, in his absence, and told Laurence all. He did +not attempt to deny anything. + +"What shall I do?" cried he, "what shall I do?" + +Laurence drew him to her, and muttered in a shuddering voice: + +"Save the name of Tremorel; there are pistols here." + +He recoiled, as if he had seen death itself. + +"No," said he. "I can yet fly and conceal myself; I will go alone, +and you can rejoin me afterward." + +"I have already told you that it is too late. The police have +surrounded the house. And--you know--it is the galleys, or--the +scaffold!" + +"I can get away by the courtyard." + +"It is guarded; look." + +He ran to the window, saw M. Lecoq's men, and returned half mad +and hideous with terror. + +"I can at least try," said he, "by disguising myself--" + +"Fool! A detective is in there, and it was he who left that +warrant to arrest you on the table." + +He saw that he was lost beyond hope. + +"Must I die, then?" he muttered. + +"Yes, you must; but before you die write a confession of your +crimes, for the innocent may be suspected--" + +He sat down mechanically, took the pen which Laurence held out to +him, and wrote: + +"Being about to appear before God, I declare that I alone, and +without accomplices, poisoned Sauvresy and murdered the Countess +de Tremorel, my wife." + +When he had signed and dated this, Laurence opened a bureau drawer; +Hector seized one of the brace of pistols which were lying in it, +and she took the other. But Tremorel, as before at the hotel, and +then in the dying Sauvresy's chamber, felt his heart fail him as he +placed the pistol against his forehead. He was livid, his teeth +chattered, and he trembled so violently that he let the pistol drop. + +"Laurence, my love," he stammered, "what will--become of you?" + +"Me! I have sworn that I will follow you always and everywhere. +Do you understand?" + +"Ah, 'tis horrible!" said he. "It was not I who poisoned Sauvresy-- +it was she--there are proofs of it; perhaps, with a good +advocate--" + +M. Lecoq did not lose a word or a gesture of this tragical scene. +Either purposely or by accident, he pushed the door-curtain, which +made a slight noise. + +Laurence thought the door was being opened, that the detective was +returning, and that Hector would fall alive into their hands. + +"Miserable coward!" she cried, pointing her pistol at him, "shoot, +or else--" + +He hesitated; there was another rustle at the door; she fired. + +Tremorel fell dead. + +Laurence, with a rapid movement, took up the other pistol, and was +turning it against herself, when M. Lecoq sprung upon her and tore +the weapon from her grasp. + +"Unhappy girl!" cried he, "what would you do?" + +"Die. Can I live now?" + +"Yes, you can live," responded M. Lecoq. "And more, you ought to +live." + +"I am a lost woman--" + +"No, you are a poor child lured away by a wretch. You say you are +very guilty; perhaps so; live to repent of it. Great sorrows like +yours have their missions in this world, one of devotion and +charity. Live, and the good you do will attach you once more to +life. You have yielded to the deceitful promises of a villain +remember, when you are rich, that there are poor innocent girls +forced to lead a life of miserable shame for a morsel of bread. +Go to these unhappy creatures, rescue them from debauchery, and +their honor will be yours." + +M. Lecoq narrowly watched Laurence as he spoke, and perceived that +he had touched her. Still, her eyes were dry, and were lit up with +a strange light. + +"Besides, your life is not your own--you know." + +"Ah," she returned, "I must die now, even for my child, if I would +not die of shame when he asks for his father--" + +"You will reply, Madame, by showing him an honest man and an old +friend, who is ready to give him his name--Monsieur Plantat." + +The old justice was broken with grief; yet he had the strength to +say: + +"Laurence, my beloved child, I beg you accept me--" + +These simple words, pronounced with infinite gentleness and +sweetness, at last melted the unhappy young girl, and determined +her. She burst into tears. + +She was saved. + +M. Lecoq hastened to throw a shawl which he saw on a chair about +her shoulders, and passed her arm through M. Plantat's, saying to +the latter: + +"Go, lead her away; my men have orders to let you pass, and Palot +will lend you his carriage." + +"But where shall we go?" + +"To Orcival; Monsieur Courtois has been informed by a letter from +me that his daughter is living, and he is expecting her. Come, +lose no time." + +M. Lecoq, when he was left alone, listened to the departure of the +carriage which took M. Plantat and Laurence away; then he returned +to Tremorel's body. + +"There," said he to himself, "lies a wretch whom I have killed +instead of arresting and delivering him up to justice. Have I done +my duty? No; but my conscience will not reproach me, because I have +acted rightly." + +And running to the staircase, he called his men. + + + + +XXVIII + +The day after Tremorel's death, old Bertaud and Guespin were set at +liberty, and received, the former four thousand francs to buy a boat +and new tackle, and the latter ten thousand francs, with a promise +of a like sum at the end of the year, if he would go and live in +his own province. Fifteen days later, to the great surprise of the +Orcival gossips, who had never learned the details of these events, +M. Plantat wedded Mlle. Laurence Courtois; and the groom and bride +departed that very evening for Italy, where it was announced they +would linger at least a year. + +As for Papa Courtois, he has offered his beautiful domain at Orcival +for sale; he proposes to settle in the middle of France, and is on +the lookout for a commune in need of a good mayor. + +M. Lecoq, like everybody else, would, doubtless, have forgotten the +Valfeuillu affair, had it not been that a notary called on him +personally the other morning with a very gracious letter from +Laurence, and an enormous sheet of stamped paper. This was no +other than a title deed to M. Plantat's pretty estate at Orcival, +"with furniture, stable, carriage-house, garden, and other +dependencies and appurtenances thereunto belonging," and some +neighboring acres of pleasant fields. + +"Prodigious!" cried M. Lecoq. "I didn't help ingrates, after all! +I am willing to become a landed proprietor, just for the rarity of +the thing." + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Mystery of Orcival, by Gaboriau + diff --git a/old/orcvl10.zip b/old/orcvl10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7a4d907 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/orcvl10.zip |
