"At the consulate, of course?"
"Will it be safe for you to be seen there?"
"Monsieur, I stake my professional reputation that, when I call on you, you shall not recognise me till I choose to reveal myself. There is an extremely artful person mixed up in this affair, but I shall prove still more artful than any of them; take the word of Hocquart Clermont Delamarre."
With another bow the French detective made his exit.
He proceeded in the first place to his own temporary residence, where he made a considerable alteration in his personal appearance.
Then making straight for the quarter of the city mostly inhabited by the respectable working cla.s.ses, he made a friendly call on Pierre Lenoir the coiner, who, as it will be remembered, the police had been unable to trace since his encounter with Herbert Murray and the waggoner.
A friendly call we have termed it, and so it seemed at first, for the detective and the criminal shook hands in the most friendly manner.
"Hullo, friend Clermont," exclaimed Lenoir, "what brings you from Paris!"
"Why, it was too hot for me there."
There was a pause.
"And you, too," continued the detective. "I have heard your name mentioned very much of late. How did that affair happen?"
Pierre Lenoir told his friend, whom of course he did not know as a detective, but merely as an a.s.sociate with coiners and such like people, how he had been tricked by Markby.
"But I"ll have his life, though."
"Doubtless. It will be a bad day for him when he falls into your hands."
Lenoir growled a fierce oath.
"He has escaped me for the present, but if I wait for years, I will have my revenge. Pierre Lenoir never forgives."
Unheedful of the coiner"s anger, the detective stroked his moustache, and continued--
"But how about the prisoners up at the gaol yonder?"
"They are innocent."
"Innocent!"
"Undoubtedly."
"Then why are they in prison?"
"Because the only persons who can clear them are Markby and myself."
"Ah, I see!"
"And Markby for some reason or other won"t clear them."
"Some old grudge, I suppose."
"Yes. However, they are innocent; when I tried them, they flatly refused to have anything to do with the game."
"Well, they are in a nice fix; but how did you manage to escape after that little affair with Markby and the peasant?""
"Crawled into a bush as near as possible to the scene of the fight."
"Ah!"
"If I had gone half a mile away, the police would no doubt have found me, but the thick-headed rascals never thought of looking only half a dozen yards off. Ha, ha, ha!"
The detective smiled grimly.
"They are thick-headed rascals."
And after a pause occupied in listening to sounds in the street, he repeated--
"And the English prisoners are entirely innocent then?"
"Entirely."
"Now listen to me, Pierre Lenoir," continued the detective, rapping the table smartly as though to command attention. "But what a curious echo you have in this old room."
"I had not noticed it; but to continue."
"These English refused to have any thing to do with your business, you say?"
"Yes; and showed fight when I would have used force to detain them."
"Then if the judge knows that, the young fellows will be released?"
"Yes; but, my dear friend, it is not likely I shall go to the court to give evidence in their favour."
"You will."
"Nonsense."
"I shall take you there."
There was something in his visitor"s manner that made Lenoir first start from his seat and make a hasty movement towards the table.
But he recoiled when Hocquart Clermont Delamarre thrust a revolver in his face and exclaimed--
"If you make another movement towards that drawer where your pistols are, I will send a bullet through you. Keep your hands down by your side."
"What in the fiend"s name does this mean?" gasped the coiner.
"It means that you are my prisoner."