Redhead was well named! His bullet-head was covered with russet-red hair, cut very short; his complexion was a good match; his bloated cheeks and his potato-shaped nose were covered with red patches; his shaven chin was a tawny red; round his little gimlet eyes was a fringe of red lashes: it was a b.e.s.t.i.a.l face.
He was hatless; above his waistcoat with metal b.u.t.tons he wore a black coat; his trousers had a yellow line down them: he was evidently a servant, wearing the livery of some big house. The fellow was slowly recovering his breath; but he continued to wipe great drops of sweat off his narrow forehead; he was shaking all over, and his morose countenance was twitching and contracting nervously.
"Well, what"s your news? Good or bad?" questioned Mother Toulouche in a brutal tone.
Redhead replied almost inaudibly:
"That depends!... It"s good on the whole."
A gleam of cupidity showed in the old receiver"s eyes:
"Got a bit of tin on her back, that woman--eh?"
Redhead nodded a "yes." Thereupon Mother Toulouche went into her back store and returned with a claret gla.s.s filled to the brim with rum:
"Shoot that down your throat! That"ll put you right!"
When he had swallowed the b.u.mper he seemed to gain courage, and said:
"If I didn"t get here sooner it"s because I had to wait--but I saw the little thing...."
"What"s her name?"
"Nadine," replied Redhead, and added: "A pretty little brat, too!...
She"s got some fire in her eyes!"
"What"s that to do with it?" interrupted Mother Toulouche.
"You don"t mean to tell me you were able to make her gabble a bit?" she queried contemptuously.
Redhead bridled: "Likely, since I know everything now ... and I"m her sweetheart, let me tell you!"
Mother Toulouche said in a jeering tone:
"You don"t tell me! You!"
"Oh," replied Redhead, "it"s just a way of speaking. She"s a good little thing--there"s nothing to it, you know!"
"So much the worse!" declared Mother Toulouche. "Virtuous sorts aren"t any use to our lot!... Well--what did she tell you--out with it!"
"Well," said Redhead, "I waited three-quarters of an hour before Nadine joined me.... I had no bother in making her talk, I can tell you: without the asking she told me everything ... she was pretty well flabbergasted with all the jewels her mistress had stuck on her clothes and her skin.... Seems there"s hundreds of thousands" worth!... All pearls and diamonds! Nothing but...."
Mother Toulouche was calculating:
"Real pearls, real diamonds--it"s possible there"s all that worth!"
Steps could be heard on the pavement just outside.
Redhead began to shake all over:
"Who is it?" he asked. "Someone coming in?"
Mother Toulouche grinned:
"Be easy, then! Haven"t I told you there"s nothing to fear?"
Nevertheless he asked anxiously:
"There"s nothing more I"m wanted for here, is there? I"ve told you all I know."
"No, no, it"s all right!" replied Mother Toulouche, maternal and conciliating, "there"s nothing more for you to do here.... Still, if you want to see big Ernestine...."
Without waiting to hear the end of her sentence Redhead hurried towards the exit. Mother Toulouche did not try to detain him:
"After all," she said in a low tone to his back as a kind of farewell, "cut your sticks, my lad ... since you"re funky!"
When alone she grumbled aloud:
"What a lot they are!... I never did!... White-livered, and for nothing at all!"
Mother Toulouche was still muttering when big Ernestine marched in through the back way. She had on a large hat and was heavily veiled. She proceeded to remove both hat and veil:
"Well?" she queried.
"They"ve got on to it all right! Redhead has just gone! He knows through the little maid that the Princess went off to the ball, dressed up to the nines--hung with jewels like a shrine!"
Big Ernestine uttered a deep sigh of satisfaction: her only reply was to hustle the old receiver:
"Look alive, Mother Toulouche!... You"ve got to give me a beggar"s outfit: it"s up to you to see I"m disguised properly, and there"s not a minute to lose either!"
Mother Toulouche was an expert at disguises and make-up of every sort: this was not to be wondered at, considering the queer company she kept, and the fraudulent business she carried on, and the smuggling she was mixed up in!
Big Ernestine, disguised as a poverty-stricken creature and rendered unrecognisable, looked exactly like some unfortunate reduced to soliciting alms. She walked into the back store, and helped Mother Toulouche to take from a cupboard some bottles, bandages, and medicated cotton-wool. By the light of a smoky lamp the two women scrutinised the labels, sniffing the various phials and flasks. Big Ernestine, with the aid of Mother Toulouche, prepared compresses of pomade and cotton-wool, on which she sprinkled a few drops of a yellow liquid, giving out a sickening odour. Besides this big Ernestine put inside her bodice a long phial, after making certain that the mixture, with which it was full, contained chloroform....
Then, under Mother Toulouche"s watchful eye, Ernestine prepared what was called in that world of light-fingered gentry "the mask": a mask of cotton, which is moulded by force on the face of the victim in order to plunge him, or her, into a heavy sleep. Whilst making these sinister preparations the two women talked as they went on with their evil task.
Big Ernestine said, in reply to Mother Toulouche"s questionings:
"Oh, it"s simple enough! It"s like this:... When the motor-car stops I shall go to the right-hand door and begin to beg ... likely enough, the Princess won"t want to hear what I have to say, but while I attract her attention, Mimile, who will be on the other side, will open the door, and will stick the compress on her mug.... She won"t struggle--besides, Mimile will have hold of her--and then I"ll have had time to see where her jewels are, and how they are fastened, and then I"ll soon have them in my pocket--my deep "un!"
Mother Toulouche nodded:
"It"s arranged all right, but how will you arrest the motor?"
"Oh, that"s where the others come in; they"ll do it all right.... I expect they"re seeing to it now!..."
"But, look here," cried Mother Toulouche, "Mimile isn"t in bits then?
They said he had fallen from his flier!"