Big Ernestine gave a laugh:
"He fell right enough, poor little fellow, and from pretty high too--but he"s not broken a thing ... not this time ... a bit of luck I don"t think--eh?"
"He"s a mascot, I"m certain," declared Mother Toulouche. Then she said: "You spoke of the others?... Who are they--the others?"
"But didn"t they tell you?" cried the surprised Ernestine, for she thought old Mother Toulouche was in the know: "Why, there"s the Beadle--and the Beard...."
"Oh," cried Mother Toulouche, much impressed: "If the Beard"s in it, then it"s a serious affair!"
"Yes," replied big Ernestine, staring hard at the old receiver of stolen goods: "It"s serious all right! If the chloroform doesn"t work--oh, well ... they"ll bring the knife into play...."
Big Ernestine looked at her little silver watch to mark the time:
"Past midnight!" she remarked: "I must hurry off and see what they"re up to!"
As she was making off Mother Toulouche stopped her:
"Have a gla.s.s of rum to start on--it puts heart into you!"
The two women were quite ready for a drink together. When they had swallowed their dose, big Ernestine smacked her tongue:
"Famous stuff!... It puts a heart into you and no mistake!"
"Yes, it"s the right stuff--the best," agreed Mother Toulouche: "It"s what Nibet prefers!" she added. Then she cried: "But Nibet, how ...
isn"t he in it?"
Big Ernestine put a finger on her lips:
"Nibet"s in it of course--as he always is--you know that, old Toulouche--but he"s content to show the way--you know he seldom does anything himself ... besides, it seems he"s on duty at the depot to-night!"
Big Ernestine threw an old shawl over her head and went off crying:
"I"m off, and in for it now!... Soon be back, Mother Toulouche!"
The magnificent mansion of Thomery, the sugar refiner, overlooked the park Monceau. It was approached by a very quiet little avenue, in which were a few big houses: it opened on to the boulevard Malesherbes, and was known as the avenue de Valois. All the dwellings there are sumptuous, richly inhabited, and if the avenue is peaceful and silent by day, it is no uncommon thing to see it of an evening crowded with carriages and luxurious motor-cars, come to fetch the owners away to dinners and entertainments.
On this particular evening the approaches to the avenue de Valois were full of animation. Motors and broughams succeeded one another in a long file, putting down the guests of Thomery under an immense marquee, covering the steps leading up to the vestibule.
All the smart world had been invited to the reception: all Paris swarmed into the brilliantly illuminated entrance-halls of the mansion.
Two mounted policemen sat as immovable as bronze caryatides on either side of the entrance, whilst a swarm of policemen made the carriages move on, and drove away from the aristocratic avenue de Valois the band of poverty-stricken and ragged creatures who crowded the pavement with the hope of securing a handsome tip by opening a carriage door or picking up some fallen object.
It was no easy matter to keep order. One of the police sergeants accustomed to ceremonial functions remarked to one of his younger colleagues:
"I have seen b.a.l.l.s and receptions enough! Well, my boy, this Thomery affair is as fine a set out as if it were at the President"s!"
Although it was one o"clock in the morning, both on the boulevard Malesherbes and at the entrance to the rue de Monceau there was movement and activity. If, as seemed likely, there was a crush in the great reception-rooms of the Thomery mansion, it was certain that outside the crowd had to form up in line to get near the counters, where the wine sellers were serving their customers without a moment"s intermission--serving them with drinks of every description. Thus there was a hubbub, there was noise and roystering clamour all around. Most of the chauffeurs, coachmen, and servants knew one another.
Mingling with all this aristocracy of the servant cla.s.s were pickpockets, mendicants obsequious and wheedling, who offered themselves as understudies to these of the upper ten of the servant world, and these aristocrats were ready to seize this chance of a little liberty, and at the same time play the generous patron to these poor failures in life"s battle. In fact they gave more generous tips than their masters; for did they not rub shoulders with misery and thus realise, only too vividly, the measureless horrors of dest.i.tution?
Ernestine and Mimile lost themselves in the noisy crowd. They were all eyes and ears for everything going on around them, whilst keeping in view their two accomplices, the Beadle and the Beard. This was more than usually difficult, because they were disguised almost out of recognition. The Beard was m.u.f.fled in a blue blouse and a big soft hat, which gave him the look of a peasant, who had wandered into a crowd with which he had nothing in common. The Beadle was capitally disguised as a coachman in good service who is out of a situation, but who, from vanity and custom, sports the emblems of office.
He was continually chewing a quid of tobacco; for such is the habit of coachmen who cannot smoke on their seats, and thus console themselves with two sous" worth of roll tobacco.
The Beadle stopped beside a chauffeur who had just got down from his car, a magnificent limousine, lined with cream cloth, while its exterior was a dark maroon in the best taste.
"Why, it"s Casimir!" cried the Beadle, going up to the chauffeur with hands outstretched and smiling face.
Mechanically the chauffeur, addressed as Casimir, responded to the offered handclasp. But, after a short silence, he said in a questioning tone, quite frankly:
"I cannot recall you."
"Can"t you remember me!" cried the Beadle. "Why, don"t you remember Cesar--Cesar who was with Rothschild last year?"
No, Casimir could not remember. But he was quite willing to believe that he knew Cesar, for he had seen and known so many since he had been in the service of Princess Sonia Danidoff, that there was nothing extraordinary about his forgetfulness. Besides, Cesar looked quite a decent fellow, and had a taking face, and one only had to look at that beaming countenance of his to be sure that an invitation to take a drink together would soon be forthcoming!
The Beadle, satisfied that he had so easily made a friend of the chauffeur of Sonia Danidoff, whom he had only known by sight for the last forty-eight hours, did in fact suggest their taking a gla.s.s together. The Beadle had indeed come up to expectations!
Drink was Casimir"s besetting sin. Excellent chauffeur, solid and serious fellow as he was, he had two defects: he was addicted to tippling, though he never drank to excess, and never got drunk. Also, he was fond of a gossip: he could talk for hours without stopping.
The Beadle had been posted up regarding Casimir"s little weaknesses and tastes. Thus nothing was easier than to set trap after trap, into each of which the simple fellow fell as they were set--fell fatally.
The Beadle introduced the Beard to Casimir under the name of Father India-rubber: an old codger, whose trade was to buy and sell tyres to chauffeurs, tyres new and also second-hand. At this moment a young ragam.u.f.fin appeared on the scenes: he asked if he might be left in charge of the car. It was Mimile. The young hooligan, who had followed the conversation of the three men, and of Casimir in particular, whilst keeping in the background, now intervened at the right moment. He made his offer just as the chauffeur was looking about him in hopes of finding some poverty-stricken creatures into whose charge he could give his car. Casimir gave him twenty sous as an earnest of what was to follow in the way of coin, saying:
"Take great care of my little shanty! Don"t let anyone come mouching around it, and when I return you shall have double what you"ve just had!"
"Thank you, master!" cried Mimile, bowing low before the chauffeur: "You may rest a.s.sured I shall keep a good look out!"
Mimile exchanged signs of understanding with his two accomplices, whilst they, talking as they went, drew the innocent Casimir towards the nearest tavern, which was crowded with wine-bibbers.
Mimile, as faithful guardian of the limousine, soon got bored, although big Ernestine was prowling around, and came to have a minute"s talk with him now and again: they dared not be seen together too much for fear of attracting attention. As time went on, Mimile was surprised that neither the Beadle nor the Beard came to report progress. But at long last the majestic outline of the Beard was seen at the corner of the rue Monceau.
The pretended seller of india-rubber was coming out of the tavern.
He hastened to Mimile and, in a low, distinct voice, he gave him some hurried instructions, for now there was no time to lose:
"That idiot would never get done with his stories about motor-cars, and all that stuff and rubbish--what"s that to us? But--keep your ears open now, Mimile--it seems there are still fifteen litres of petrol in the tank, and that would take it a long way, for the motor consumes very little.... But this shanty has got to stop about five hundred yards from here, at the corner of the rue de Monceau and the rue de Teheran ...
it"s by this way Casimir will take his Baroness back from the ball....
Well, what you have to do is to take fourteen litres and a half from that tank and pitch them in the gutter!... When Casimir finds that his petrol has given out, he will have to go in search of more ... it"s during his absence that we will work the trick on the pretty Princess--we"ll perform an operation on her, and amputate her--jewellery--the whole lot!"
The Beard drew from under his blouse an empty bottle, which he had stolen in the tavern:
"Here"s your measure! Count carefully fourteen litres and a half--that done, wait quietly till Casimir turns up: your part in the story will be forty sous, and not to rouse his suspicions; then, while he goes up the avenue de Valois to take up the Princess, you and Ernestine have to gallop off to the corner of the rue de Monceau and the rue de Teheran, then ... wait!"
Mimile, with the agility of a monkey and the ability of a first-rate chauffeur--for there was nothing he did not know in the way of applied mechanics, as became an aviator--executed to the letter his accomplice"s orders.