"Why, it"s Michel and Henri and Leon!" Then, turning to Fandor, he explained: "Three inspectors."
Michel repeated the question: "Well, chief, what"s up?"
"What do you mean?"
"You"ve just come from the Cite Frochot, chief?"
Juve was amazed. "Look here," he said, "where do you come from, Michel?
The Prefecture?"
"No, chief, from the head office of No. IX."
"Then how do you know we were at the Cite Frochot?"
Taken aback, Michel replied: "Why, from seeing you here, after the affair."
"What affair?" insisted Juve.
"Well, chief, it"s this way. The three of us were on duty this morning at the Rue Rochefoucauld Station. About twenty minutes ago the telephone rang and I heard a woman asking in a broken and choked voice if it was the police station. On my answering it was, she begged me to come to the rescue, crying, "Murder! I"m dying!""
"What then?" questioned Juve.
"Then I asked who was speaking, but unfortunately Central had cut me off."
"You made inquiries?"
"Yes, chief, and after a quarter of an hour Central told me that only one subscriber had called up the police station, the number being 928-12, name of Doctor Chaleck in the Cite Frochot."
"I suppose you asked for the number again?"
"I did, but I could get no reply."
After a pause, during which Juve was lost in thought, the officer added timidly: "We"d better hurry if a crime has been committed."
Juve beckoned Michel to him.
"There are too many of us," he said. "You come along, Michel; the other two must go back to the station and be ready to join us in case of need."
The two officers and Fandor went hurriedly up the Rue Pigalle and came to a halt by Doctor Chaleck"s door.
A loud ringing brought no reply. It was repeated, and finally a voice cried: "Who is there; what"s the matter?"
"Open," ordered Juve.
"To whom do you wish to speak?"
"To Doctor Chaleck." And Juve added: "Open, it"s the police."
"The police! What the deuce do they want with me?"
"You"ll soon find out," answered Michel. "Do you suppose we"d be making this row if we were criminals?"
Doubtless convinced by this reasoning, Doctor Chaleck decided at length to open his door.
"What do you want with me?" he repeated.
Juve quickly explained matters.
"We"ve just had a telephone message to say that some ruffians, possibly murderers, are in your house."
"Murderers!" cried Chaleck in amazement. "But whom could they murder?
I"m living here alone."
At this a.s.sertion, Juve, Fandor and Michel looked at each other, mystified.
"Well, in any case we must search your house from top to bottom," said Juve, and added as an afterthought: "I suppose you are thoroughly satisfied that we come with honest intentions?"
Doctor Chaleck smiled:
"Oh! Inspector Juve"s features are very well known to me, and I place myself entirely at his disposition."
The three men, led by Chaleck, ransacked all the rooms on the ground floor; finding nothing suspicious, they then went up to the floor above.
"I have only three more rooms to show you, gentlemen," said the doctor.
"My bathroom, my bedroom and my study."
The bathroom disclosed nothing of interest, and Chaleck, throwing open the door of another room, announced, "My study."
Scarcely had Fandor set foot in the study, from which he and Juve had so recently made their escape, when a cry burst from his lips:
"Good G.o.d! How horrible!"
The apartment was in the greatest disorder. Overturned chairs bore witness to a violent struggle. One of the mahogany panels of the desk had been partly smashed in. A window curtain was torn and hanging, and the small gas stove was broken.
Fandor, at the first glance, saw what appeared to be a long trail of blood, extending from the window to the desk. Stepping forward quickly, he discovered the body of a woman frightfully crushed and covered with blood.
"Dead some time," cried Fandor. "The body is cold and the blood already congealed."
Juve tranquilly examined the room, and took in its tragic horror. "The telephone apparatus is overturned," he muttered to himself. "There has been a struggle between the victim and the murderer. Ah!--theft was the object of the crime."
"Theft!" cried Doctor Chaleck, coming forward.
"Look, doctor, your safe has been overturned, broken in and ransacked,"
answered Juve, as he and Fandor cautiously lifted the woman. The body was a ma.s.s of contusions and appeared to be one large wound.
Juve turned to the doctor, who, livid with consternation, was holding up a small grey linen bag which had contained his bonds.
"Come, doctor, calm yourself and give us some information. Can you make anything of it?"