No consultation held at the bedside
of a dying man ever took place in the presence of
two physicians so utterly unlike each other as those
who accompanied the commissary of police to the Poivrière.
One of them, a tall old man with a
bald head, wearing a broad-brimmed hat, and an overcoat
of antique cut, was evidently one of those modest
savants encountered occasionally in the byways of Paris — one
of those healers devoted to their art, who too often
die in obscurity, after rendering immense services
to mankind. He had the gracious calmness of a
man who, having seen so much of human misery, has nothing
left to learn, and no troubled conscience could have
possibly sustained his searching glance, which was
as keen as his lancet.
His colleague — young, fresh-looking,
light-haired, and jovial — was somewhat foppishly
attired; and his white hands were encased in handsome
fur gloves. There was a soft self-satisfied smile
on his face, and he had the manners of those practitioners
who, for profit’s sake, invariably recommend
the infallible panaceas invented each month in chemical
laboratories and advertised ad nauseam in the back
pages of newspapers. He had probably written
more than one article upon “Medicine for the
use of the people”; puffing various mixtures,
pills, ointments, and plasters for the benefit of
their respective inventors.
“I will request you, gentlemen,”
said the commissary of police, “to begin your
duties by examining the victim who wears a military
costume. Here is a sergeant-major summoned to
answer a question of identity, whom I must send back
to his quarters as soon as possible.”
The two physicians responded with
a gesture of assent, and aided by Father Absinthe
and another agent of police, they lifted the body and
laid it upon two tables, which had previously been
placed end to end. They were not obliged to make
any note of the attitude in which they found the body,
since the unfortunate man, who was still alive when
the police entered the cabin, had been moved before
he expired.
“Approach, sergeant,”
ordered the commissary, “and look carefully at
this man.”
It was with very evident repugnance
that the old soldier obeyed.
“What is the uniform that he wears?”
“It is the uniform of the 2d battalion of the
53d regiment of the line.”
“Do you recognize him?”
“Not at all.”
“Are you sure that he does not belong to your
regiment?”
“I can not say for certain:
there are some conscripts at the Depot whom I have
never seen. But I am ready to swear that he had
never formed part of the 2d battalion — which,
by the way, is mine, and in which I am sergeant-major.”
Lecoq, who had hitherto remained in
the background, now stepped forward. “It
might be as well,” he suggested, “to note
the numbers marked on the other articles of clothing.”
“That is a very good idea,” said the commissary,
approvingly.
“Here is his shako,” added
the young police agent. “It bears the number
3,129.”
The officials followed Lecoq’s
advice, and soon discovered that each article of clothing
worn by the unfortunate man bore a different number.
“The deuce!” murmured
the sergeant; “there is every indication — But
it is very singular.”
Invited to consider what he was going
to say, the brave trooper evidently made an effort
to collect his intellectual faculties. “I
would stake my epaulets that this fellow never was
a soldier,” he said at last. “He
must have disguised himself to take part in the Shrove
Sunday carnival.”
“Why do you think that?”
“Oh, I know it better than I
can explain it. I know it by his hair, by his
nails, by his whole appearance, by a certain je
ne saïs quoi; in short, I know it by everything
and by nothing. Why look, the poor devil did
not even know how to put on his shoes; he has laced
his gaiters wrong side outwards.” Evidently
further doubt was impossible after this evidence,
which confirmed the truth of Lecoq’s first remark
to Inspector Gevrol.
“Still, if this person was a
civilian, how could he have procured this clothing?”
insisted the commissary. “Could he have
borrowed it from the men in your company?”
“Yes, that is possible; but it is difficult
to believe.”
“Is there no way by which you could ascertain?”
“Oh! very easily. I have
only to run over to the fort and order an inspection
of clothing.”
“Do so,” approved the
commissary; “it would be an excellent way of
getting at the truth.”
But Lecoq had just thought of a method
quite as convincing, and much more prompt. “One
word, sergeant,” said he, “isn’t
cast off military clothing sold by public auction?”
“Yes; at least once a year, after the inspection.”
“And are not the articles thus sold marked in
some way?”
“Assuredly.”
“Then see if there isn’t
some mark of the kind on this poor wretch’s
uniform.”
The sergeant turned up the collar
of the coat and examined the waist-band of the pantaloons.
“You are right,” he said, “these
are condemned garments.”
The eyes of the young police agent
sparkled. “We must then believe that the
poor devil purchased this costume,” he observed.
“Where? Necessarily at the Temple, from
one of the dealers in military clothing. There
are only five or six of these establishments.
I will go from one to another of them, and the person
who sold these clothes will certainly recognize them
by some trade mark.”
“And that will assist us very
much,” growled Gevrol. The sergeant-major,
to his great relief, now received permission to retire,
but not without having been warned that very probably
the commissary would require his deposition.
The moment had come to search the garments of the pretended
soldier, and the commissary, who performed this duty
himself, hoped that some clue as to the man’s
identity would be forthcoming. He proceeded with
his task, at the same time dictating to one of the
men a procès-verbal of the search; that is
to say, a minute description of all the articles he
found upon the dead man’s person. In the
right hand trousers pocket some tobacco, a pipe, and
a few matches were found; in the left hand one, a
linen handkerchief of good quality, but unmarked,
and a soiled leather pocket-book, containing seven
francs and sixty centimes.
There appeared to be nothing more,
and the commissary was expressing his regret, when,
on carefully examining the pocket-book he found a
compartment which had at first escaped his notice,
being hidden by a leather flap. This compartment
contained a carefully folded paper. The commissary
unfolded it and read the contents aloud:
“My dear Gustave, — To-morrow,
Sunday evening, do not fail to come to the ball at
the Rainbow, according to our agreement. If you
have no money pass by my house, and I will leave some
with the concierge, who will give it to you.
“Be at the ball by eight o’clock.
If I am not already there, it will not be long before
I make my appearance. Everything is going on
satisfactorily.
“Lacheneur.”
Alas! what did this letter reveal?
Only that the dead man’s name was Gustave; that
he had some connection with a man named Lacheneur,
who had advanced him money for a certain object; and
that they had met at the Rainbow some hours before
the murder.
It was little — very little — but
still it was something. It was a clue; and in
this absolute darkness even the faintest gleam of light
was eagerly welcomed.
“Lacheneur!” growled Gevrol;
“the poor devil uttered that name in his last
agony.”
“Precisely,” insisted
Father Absinthe, “and he declared that he wished
to revenge himself upon him. He accused him of
having drawn him into a trap. Unfortunately,
death cut his story short.”
Lecoq was silent. The commissary
of police had handed him the letter, and he was studying
it with the closest attention. The paper on which
it was written was of the ordinary kind; the ink was
blue. In one of the corners was a half-effaced
stamp, of which one could just distinguish the word — Beaumarchais.
This was enough for Lecoq. “This
letter,” he thought, “was certainly written
in a cafe on the Boulevard Beaumarchais. In which
one? I must ascertain that point, for this Lacheneur
must be found.”
While the agents of the prefecture
were gathered around the commissary, holding council
and deliberating, the physicians began their delicate
and disagreeable task. With the assistance of
Father Absinthe, they removed the clothing of the
pretended soldier, and then, with sleeves rolled up,
they bent over their “subject” like surgeons
in the schools of anatomy, and examined, inspected,
and appraised him physically. Very willingly
would the younger doctor have dispensed with these
formalities, which he considered very ridiculous, and
entirely unnecessary; but the old physician had too
high a regard for his profession, and for the duty
he had been called upon to fulfil, to neglect the
slightest detail. Minutely, and with the most
scrupulous exactitude, he noted the height of the
dead man, his supposed age, the nature of his temperament,
the color and length of his hair, and the degree of
development of his muscular system.
Then the doctors passed to an examination
of the wound. Lecoq had judged correctly.
The medical men declared it to be a fracture of the
base of the skull. It could, they stated, only
have been caused by some instrument with a very broad
surface, or by a violent knock of the head against
some hard substance of considerable magnitude.
But no weapon, other than the revolver,
had been found; and it was evidently not heavy enough
to produce such a wound. There must, then, necessarily,
have been a hand-to-hand struggle between the pretended
soldier and the murderer; and the latter, seizing his
adversary by the throat, had dashed him violently
against the wall. The presence of some very tiny
but very numerous spots of extravasated blood about
the neck made this theory extremely plausible.
No other wound, not even a bruise
or a scratch, was to be found. Hence, it became
evident that this terrible struggle must have been
exceedingly short. The murder of the pretended
soldier must have been consummated between the moment
when the squad of police heard the shrieks of despair
and the moment when Lecoq peered through the shutter
and saw the victim fall.
The examination of the other murdered
man required different but even greater precautions
than those adopted by the doctors in their inspection
of the pseudo soldier. The position of these two
victims had been respected; they were still lying
across the hearth as they had fallen, and their attitude
was a matter of great importance, since it might have
decisive bearing on the case. Now, this attitude
was such that one could not fail to be impressed with
the idea that with both these men death had been instantaneous.
They were both stretched out upon their backs, their
limbs extended, and their hands wide open.
No contraction or extension of the
muscles, no trace of conflict could be perceived;
it seemed evident that they had been taken unawares,
the more so as their faces expressed the most intense
terror.
“Thus,” said the old doctor,
“we may reasonably suppose that they were stupefied
by some entirely unexpected, strange, and frightful
spectacle. I have come across this terrified
expression depicted upon the faces of dead people
more than once. I recollect noticing it upon the
features of a woman who died suddenly from the shock
she experienced when one of her neighbors, with the
view of playing her a trick, entered her house disguised
as a ghost.”
Lecoq followed the physician’s
explanations, and tried to make them agree with the
vague hypotheses that were revolving in his own brain.
But who could these individuals be? Would they,
in death, guard the secret of their identity, as the
other victim had done?
The first subject examined by the
physicians was over fifty years of age. His hair
was very thin and quite gray and his face was closely
shaven, excepting a thick tuft of hair on his rather
prominent chin. He was very poorly clad, wearing
a soiled woolen blouse and a pair of dilapidated trousers
hanging in rags over his boots, which were very much
trodden down at the heels. The old doctor declared
that this man must have been instantly killed by a
bullet. The size of the circular wound, the absence
of blood around its edge, and the blackened and burnt
state of the flesh demonstrated this fact with almost
mathematical precision.
The great difference that exists in
wounds made by firearms, according to the distance
from which the death-dealing missile comes, was seen
when the physicians began to examine the last of the
murdered men. The ball that had caused the latter’s
death had scarcely crossed a yard of space before
reaching him, and his wound was not nearly so hideous
in aspect as the other’s. This individual,
who was at least fifteen years younger than his companion,
was short and remarkably ugly; his face, which was
quite beardless, being pitted all over by the smallpox.
His garb was such as is worn by the worst frequenters
of the barrière. His trousers were of a
gray checked material, and his blouse, turned back
at the throat, was blue. It was noticed that
his boots had been blackened quite recently.
The smart glazed cap that lay on the floor beside him
was in harmony with his carefully curled hair and gaudy
necktie.
These were the only facts that the
physicians’ report set forth in technical terms,
this was the only information obtained by the most
careful investigation. The two men’s pockets
were explored and turned inside out; but they contained
nothing that gave the slightest clue to their identity,
either as regards name, social position, or profession.
There was not even the slightest indication on any
of these points, not a letter, nor an address, not
a fragment of paper, nothing — not even such
common articles of personal use, as a tobacco pouch,
a knife, or a pipe which might be recognized, and
thus establish the owner’s identity. A
little tobacco in a paper bag, a couple of pocket handkerchiefs
that were unmarked, a packet of cigarettes — these
were the only articles discovered beyond the money
which the victims carried loose in their pockets.
On this point, it should be mentioned that the elder
man had sixty-seven francs about him, and the younger
one, two louis.
Rarely had the police found themselves
in the presence of so strange an affair, without the
slightest clue to guide them. Of course, there
was the fact itself, as evidenced by the bodies of
the three victims; but the authorities were quite
ignorant of the circumstances that had attended and
of the motive that had inspired the crime. Certainly,
they might hope with the powerful means of investigation
at their disposal to finally arrive at the truth in
the course of time, and after repeated efforts.
But, in the mean while, all was mystery, and so strangely
did the case present itself that it could not safely
be said who was really responsible for the horrible
tragedy at the Poivrière.
The murderer had certainly been arrested;
but if he persisted in his obstinacy, how were they
to ascertain his name? He protested that he had
merely killed in self-defense. How could it be
shown that such was not the case? Nothing was
known concerning the victims; one of whom had with
his dying breath accused himself. Then again,
an inexplicable influence tied the Widow Chupin’s
tongue. Two women, one of whom had lost an earring
valued at 5,000 francs, had witnessed the struggle — then
disappeared. An accomplice, after two acts of
unheard-of audacity, had also made his escape.
And all these people — the women, the murderer,
the keeper of the saloon, the accomplice, and the victims — were
equally strange and mysterious, equally liable not
to be what they seemed.
Perhaps the commissary of police thought
he would spend a very unpleasant quarter of an hour
at the prefecture when he reported the case.
Certainly, he spoke of the crime in a very despondent
tone.
“It will now be best,”
he said at last, “to transport these three bodies
to the Morgue. There they will doubtless be identified.”
He reflected for a moment, and then added: “And
to think that one of these dead men is perhaps Lacheneur
himself!”
“That is scarcely possible,”
said Lecoq. “The spurious soldier, being
the last to die, had seen his companions fall.
If he had supposed Lacheneur to be dead, he would
not have spoken of vengeance.”
Gevrol, who for the past two hours
had pretended to pay no attention to the proceedings,
now approached. He was not the man to yield even
to the strongest evidence. “If Monsieur,
the Commissary, will listen to me, he shall hear my
opinion, which is a trifle more definite than M. Lecoq’s
fancies.”
Before he could say any more, the
sound of a vehicle stopping before the door of the
cabin interrupted him, and an instant afterward the
investigating magistrate entered the room.
All the officials assembled at the
Poivrière knew at least by sight the magistrate
who now made his appearance, and Gevrol, an old habitue
of the Palais de Justice, mechanically murmured his
name: “M. Maurice d’Escorval.”
He was the son of that famous Baron
d’Escorval, who, in 1815, sealed his devotion
to the empire with his blood, and upon whom Napoleon,
in the Memorial of St. Helena, pronounced this magnificent
eulogium: “Men as honest as he may, I believe,
exist; but more honest, no, it is not possible.”
Having entered upon his duties as
magistrate early in life, and being endowed with remarkable
talents, it was at first supposed that the younger
D’Escorval would rise to the most exalted rank
in his profession. But he had disappointed all
such prognostications by resolutely refusing the more
elevated positions that were offered to him, in order
to retain his modest but useful functions in the public
prosecutor’s offices at Paris. To explain
his repeated refusals, he said that life in the capital
had more charms for him than the most enviable advancement
in provincial centres. But it was hard to understand
this declaration, for in spite of his brilliant connections
and large fortune, he had, ever since the death of
his eldest brother, led a most retired life, his existence
merely being revealed by his untiring labors and the
good he did to those around him.
He was now about forty-two years of
age, but appeared much younger, although a few furrows
already crossed his brow. One would have admired
his face, had it not been for the puzzling immobility
that marred its beauty, the sarcastic curl of his
thin lips, and the gloomy expression of his pale-blue
eyes. To say that he was cold and grave, did not
express the truth, it was saying too little. He
was gravity and coldness personified, with a shade
of hauteur added.
Impressed by the horror of the scene
the instant he placed his foot upon the threshold,
M. d’Escorval acknowledged the presence of the
physicians and the commissary by a slight nod of the
head. The others in the room had no existence
so far as he was concerned. At once his faculties
went to work. He studied the ground, and carefully
noted all the surroundings with the attentive sagacity
of a magistrate who realizes the immense weight of
even the slightest detail, and who fully appreciates
the eloquence of circumstantial evidence.
“This is a serious affair,”
he said gravely; “very serious.”
The commissary’s only response
was to lift his eyes to heaven. A gesture that
plainly implied, “I quite agree with you!”
The fact is, that for the past two hours the worthy
commissary’s responsibility had weighed heavily
upon him, and he secretly blessed the investigating
magistrate for relieving him of it.
“The public prosecutor was unable
to accompany me,” resumed M. d’Escorval,
“he has not the gift of omnipresence, and I doubt
if it will be possible for him to join me here.
Let us, therefore, begin operations at once.”
The curiosity of those present had
become intense; and the commissary only expressed
the general feeling when he said: “You have
undoubtedly questioned the murderer, sir, and have
learnt — ”
“I have learnt nothing,”
interrupted M. d’Escorval, apparently much astonished
at the interruption.
He took a chair and sat himself down,
and while his clerk was busy in authenticating the
commissary’s procès-verbal, he began to
read the report prepared by Lecoq.
Pale, agitated, and nervous, the young
police agent tried to read upon the magistrate’s
impassive face the impression produced by the document.
His future depended upon the magistrate’s approval
or disapproval; and it was not with a fuddled mind
like that of Father Absinthe that he had now to deal,
but with a superior intelligence.
“If I could only plead my own
cause,” he thought. “What are cold
written phrases in comparison with spoken, living
words, palpitating with emotion and imbued with the
convictions of the speaker.”
However, he was soon reassured.
The magistrate’s face retained its immobility,
but again and again did M. d’Escorval nod his
head in token of approval, and occasionally some point
more ingenious than the others extorted from his lips
the exclamations: “Not bad — very
good!”
When he had finished the perusal he
turned to the commissary and remarked: “All
this is very unlike your report of this morning, which
represented the affair as a low broil between a party
of miserable vagabonds.”
The observation was only too just
and fair; and the commissary deeply regretted that
he had trusted to Gevrol’s representations, and
remained in bed. “This morning,”
he responded evasively, “I only gave you my
first impressions. These have been modified by
subsequent researches, so that — ”
“Oh!” interrupted the
magistrate, “I did not intend to reproach you;
on the contrary, I must congratulate you. One
could not have done better nor acted more promptly.
The investigation that has been carried out shows
great penetration and research, and the results are
given with unusual clearness, and wonderful precision.”
Lecoq’s head whirled.
The commissary hesitated for an instant.
At first he was sorely tempted to confiscate this
praise to his own profit. If he drove away the
unworthy thought, it was because he was an honest man,
and more than that, because he was not displeased
to have the opportunity to do Gevrol a bad turn and
punish him for his presumptuous folly.
“I must confess,” he said
with some embarrassment, “that the merit of
this investigation does not belong to me.”
“To whom, then, shall I attribute
it — to the inspector?” thought M.
d’Escorval, not without surprise, for having
occasionally employed Gevrol, he did not expect from
him such ingenuity and sagacity as was displayed in
this report. “Is it you, then, who have
conducted this investigation so ably?” he asked.
“Upon my word, no!” responded
Inspector Gevrol. “I, myself, am not so
clever as all that. I content myself with telling
what I actually discover; and I only give proofs when
I have them in hand. May I be hung if the grounds
of this report have any existence save in the brains
of the man who imagined them.” Perhaps
the inspector really believed what he said, being
one of those persons who are blinded by vanity to such
a degree that, with the most convincing evidence before
their eyes, they obstinately deny it.
“And yet,” insisted the
magistrate, “these women whose footprints have
been detected must have existed. The accomplice
who left the flakes of wool adhering to the plank
is a real being. This earring is a positive,
palpable proof.”
Gevrol had hard work to refrain from
shrugging his shoulders. “All this can
be satisfactorily explained,” he said, “without
a search of twelve or fourteen hours. That the
murderer had an accomplice is possible. The presence
of the women is very natural. Wherever there are
male thieves, you will find female thieves as well.
As for the diamond — what does that prove?
That the scoundrels had just met with a stroke of good
luck, that they had come here to divide their booty,
and that the quarrel arose from the division.”
This was an explanation, and such
a plausable one, that M. d’Escorval was silent,
reflecting before he announced his decision. “Decidedly,”
he declared at last, “decidedly, I adopt the
hypothesis set forth in the report. Who prepared
it?”
Gevrol’s face turned red with
anger. “One of my men,” he replied,
“a clever, adroit fellow, Monsieur Lecoq.
Come forward, Lecoq, that the magistrate may see you.”
The young man advanced, his lips tightly
compressed so as to conceal a smile of satisfaction
which almost betrayed itself.
“My report, sir, is only a summary,”
he began, “but I have certain ideas — ”
“Which you will acquaint me
with, when I ask for them,” interrupted the
magistrate. And oblivious of Lecoq’s chagrin,
he drew from his clerk’s portfolio two forms,
which he filled up and handed to Gevrol, saying:
“Here are two orders; take them to the station,
where the murderer and the landlady of this cabin
are confined, and have them conducted to the prefecture,
where they will be privately examined.”
Having given these directions, M.
d’Escorval was turning toward the physicians,
when Lecoq, at the risk of a second rebuff, interposed.
“May I venture, sir, to beg of you to confide
this message to me?” he asked of the investigating
magistrate.
“Impossible, I may have need of you here.”
“I desired, sir, to collect
certain evidence and an opportunity to do so may not
present itself again.”
The magistrate perhaps fathomed the
young man’s motive. “Then, let it
be so,” he replied, “but after your task
is completed you must wait for me at the prefecture,
where I shall proceed as soon as I have finished here.
You may go.”
Lecoq did not wait for the order to
be repeated. He snatched up the papers, and hastened
away.
He literally flew over the ground,
and strange to say he no longer experienced any fatigue
from the labors of the preceding night. Never
had he felt so strong and alert, either in body or
mind. He was very hopeful of success. He
had every confidence in himself, and his happiness
would indeed have been complete if he had had another
judge to deal with. But M. d’Escorval overawed
him to such a degree that he became almost paralyzed
in his presence. With what a disdainful glance
the magistrate had surveyed him! With what an
imperious tone he had imposed silence upon him — and
that, too, when he had found his work deserving of
commendation.
“Still, never mind,” the
young detective mentally exclaimed, “no one
ever tastes perfect happiness here below.”
And concentrating all his thoughts
on the task before him, he hurried on his way.