"Empty? No! But."...
Father Louis was white as paper. He searched his pocket in feverish haste, drew from it a screwdriver, rapidly detached the lock, and rushed into the room, followed by Aunt Palmyra, who bawled:
"Oh, my good lord! Whatever is the matter with her?"
Nichoune was stretched out on her bed, and might have seemed asleep to an onlooker were it not for two things which at once struck the eye: her face was all purple, and her arms, sticking straight up in the air, were terrifyingly white and rigid. Approaching the bed, the innkeeper and Aunt Palmyra saw that Nichoune"s arms were maintained in this vertical position by means of string tied round her wrists and fastened to the canopy over the bed.
"She is dead!" cried Father Louis. "This is awful! Good heavens! What a thing to happen!"
Aunt Palmyra, for all her previous protestations of affection for her charming niece, did not seem in any way moved by the tragic discovery.
She glanced rapidly round the room without a sign of emotion. This att.i.tude only lasted a moment. Suddenly she broke out into loud lamentations uttering piercing cries: she threw herself into an arm-chair, then sank in a heap on the sofa, then returned to the table! She was making a regular nuisance of herself. The innkeeper, scared and bewildered, did not know how to act: he was staring fixedly at the unfortunate Nichoune, who gave no sign of life. Involuntarily the man had touched the dead girl"s shoulder: the body was quite cold.
The innkeeper, who had been driven into a state of distracted bewilderment by Aunt Palmyra"s behaviour, now bethought him of his obvious duty: of course he must call in the police, and also avoid scandal. Also he must stop this old woman"s outrageous goings-on.
"Be quiet!" he commanded. "You are not to make such a noise! Stay where you are! Don"t stir from that corner until I return ... and, above all, you must not touch a single thing before the arrival of the police."
"The police!" moaned Aunt Palmyra. "It is frightful! Oh, my poor Nichoune, however could this have happened?"
Nevertheless, scarcely had the innkeeper retired than the old woman, with remarkable dexterity, rummaged about among the disordered furniture, and seized a certain number of papers, which she hid in her bodice.
Hardly had she pushed them out of sight when the innkeeper returned, accompanied by a policeman. It was in vain that Father Louis endeavoured to get the policeman into the tragic room. He did not wish to do anything.
"I tell you," he repeated in his big voice, "it"s not worth my while looking at this corpse ... for the superintendent will be here shortly, and he will take charge of the legal procedure."
At the end of about ten minutes the magistrate appeared, accompanied by his secretary, and immediately proceeded to a summary interrogation of the innkeeper; but, in the presence of Aunt Palmyra, it was impossible to do any serious work. This insupportable old woman could not make head or tail of the questions, and answered at random.
"Leave the room, Madame, leave the room, and I will hear what you have to say presently."
"But where must I go?" whined Aunt Palmyra.
"Go where you like! Go to the devil!" shouted the exasperated inspector.
"Oh, well, I suppose I ought not to say so," replied the old woman, looking seriously offended, "but, though you are an inspector, you have a very rude tongue in your head!"
To emphasise her majestic exit, Aunt Palmyra added:
"Fancy now! Not one of you have thought of it! I am going as far as the corner to look for flowers for this poor little thing."
Either florists were difficult to find, or Aunt Palmyra had no wish to see them as she pa.s.sed by, for the old woman walked right through the town without stopping. When she reached the railway station she looked at the clock.
"By the saints! I have barely time," she e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed.
The old termagant traversed the waiting-room, got her ticket punched--it was a return ticket--and stepped on to the platform at the precise moment a porter was crying in an ear-piercing voice:
"Pa.s.sengers for Paris take your seats!"
Aunt Palmyra installed herself in a second-cla.s.s compartment: "_For ladies only._"
The train rolled out of the station.
An inspector was examining the tickets at the stopping-place at Chateau-Thierry.
"Excuse me, sir," said he, waking a pa.s.senger who had fallen fast asleep--a stout man, with a smooth face and scanty hair--"Excuse me, Monsieur, but you are in a "_For ladies only_!""
The man leapt up and rubbed his eyes; instinctively, with the gesture of a short-sighted man, he took from his waistcoat pocket a large pair of spectacles in gold frames, and stared at the inspector.
"I am sorry! It"s a mistake! I will change into another compartment!"
The stranger pa.s.sed along the connecting corridor, carrying a small bundle of clothes wrapped in a shawl of many colours!... An hour later, the train from Chalons arrived at Paris, ten minutes behind time. Directly he stood on the platform the traveller looked at his watch.
"Twenty-five past eleven! I can do it!"
He jumped into a taxi, giving his orders:
"Rue Saint Dominique--Ministry of War!... and quick!"
Shortly after the unexpected departure of Colonel Hofferman, Juve, judging it useless to prolong the conversation, had quitted the Under-Secretary of State"s office. Instead of mounting to the Second Bureau, he sent in his name to Commandant Dumoulin. Although their acquaintance was but slight, the two men were in sympathy: each realised that the other was courageous and devoted to duty; both were enamoured of an active life and open air.
Juve was hoping that at all events he would hear something new, if not facts about the affair he had in hand, at least with regard to the att.i.tude which the military authorities meant to take up. Commandant Dumoulin, however, knew nothing or did not wish to say anything, and Juve was about to leave, when Colonel Hofferman entered.
Hofferman looked radiant. Catching sight of Juve, he smiled.
"Ah! Upon my word! I did not expect to find you here, Monsieur ...
but, since you are, you will be glad to get some news of the Brocq affair."...
Juve"s eyes were shining notes of interrogation.
"I rendered due homage to your perspicacity just now," continued the colonel: "you were absolutely right in your prognostication that Brocq had a mistress; unfortunately--I am sorry for the wound to your self-esteem--the correctness of your version stops there! Brocq"s mistress was not a society woman, as you thought: on the contrary, she was a girl of the lower orders ... a music-hall singer, called Nichoune ... of Chalons!"
"You have proof of it?"
The colonel, with a superior air, held out a packet of letters to Juve.
"Here is the correspondence--letters written by Brocq to the girl! One of my collaborators seized them at girl"s place."...
Juve scrutinised the letters.
"It"s curious," he said, half to himself.... "An annoying coincidence ...
but the name of Nichoune does not appear once in these letters!"
"No other name appears," observed the colonel: "Consequently, taking into consideration the place where these letters have been found ...
we must conclude."...