THE MYSTERY OF ORCIVAL. Emile Gaboriau

THE MYSTERY OF ORCIVAL - Emile Gaboriau


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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?”

      Chapter VI

       Table of Contents

      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,


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