"To be innocent, and to allow one"s self to be condemned, is still stranger; and yet there are instances"--
The young lawyer spoke in that short, imperious tone which is, so to say, the privilege of his profession, and with such an accent of a.s.surance, that M. de Chandore felt his hopes revive. M. Seneschal was sorely troubled.
"And what do you think, sir?" he asked.
"That M. de Boiscoran must be innocent," replied the young advocate.
And, without leaving time for objections, he continued,--
"That is the opinion of a man who is not influenced by any consideration. I come here without any preconceived notions. I do not know Count Claudieuse any more than M. de Boiscoran. A crime has been committed: I am told the circ.u.mstances; and I at once come to the conclusion that the reasons which led to the arrest of the accused would lead me to set him at liberty."
"Oh!"
"Let me explain. If M. de Boiscoran is guilty, he has shown, in the way in which he received M. Galpin at the house, a perfectly unheard-of self-control, and a matchless genius for comedy. Therefore, if he is guilty, he is immensely clever"--
"But."
"Allow me to finish. If he is guilty, he has in the examination shown a marvellous want of self-control, and, to be brief, a nameless stupidity: therefore, if he is guilty, he is immensely stupid"--
"But."
"Allow me to finish. Can one and the same person be at once so unusually clever and so unusually stupid? Judge yourself. But again: if M. de Boiscoran is guilty, he ought to be sent to the insane asylum, and not to prison; for any one else but a madman would have poured out the dirty water in which he had washed his blackened hands, and would have buried anywhere that famous breech-loader, of which the prosecution makes such good use."
"Jacques is safe!" exclaimed M. de Chandore.
M. Seneschal was not so easily won over.
"That is specious pleading," he said. "Unfortunately, we want something more than a logic conclusion to meet a jury with an abundance of witnesses on the other side."
"We will find more on our side."
"What do you propose to do?"
"I do not know. I have just told you my first impression. Now I must study the case, and examine the witnesses, beginning with old Anthony."
M. de Chandore had risen. He said,--
"We can reach Boiscoran in an hour. Shall I send for my carriage?"
"As quickly as possible," replied the young lawyer.
M. de Chandore"s servant was back in a quarter of an hour, and announced that the carriage was at the door. M. de Chandore and M. Folgat took their seats; and, while they were getting in, the mayor warned the young Paris lawyer,--
"Above all, be prudent and circ.u.mspect. The public mind is already but too much inflamed. Politics are mixed up with the case. I am afraid of some disturbance at the burial of the firemen; and they bring me word that Dr. Seignebos wants to make a speech at the graveyard. Good-by and good luck!"
The driver whipped the horse, and, as the carriage was going down through the suburbs, M. de Chandore said,--
"I cannot understand why Anthony did not come to me immediately after his master had been arrested. What can have happened to him?"
IV.
M. Seneschal"s horse was perhaps one of the very best in the whole province; but M. de Chandore"s was still better. In less than fifty minutes they had driven the whole distance to Boiscoran; and during this time M. de Chandore and M. Folgat had not exchanged fifty words.
When they reached Boiscoran, the courtyard was silent and deserted.
Doors and windows were hermetically closed. On the steps of the porch sat a stout young peasant, who, at the sight of the newcomers, rose, and carried his hand to his cap.
"Where is Anthony?" asked M. de Chandore.
"Up stairs, sir."
The old gentleman tried to open the door: it resisted.
"O sir! Anthony has barricaded the door from the inside."
"A curious idea," said M. de Chandore, knocking with the b.u.t.t-end of his whip.
He was knocking fiercer and fiercer, when at last Anthony"s voice was heard from within,--
"Who is there?"
"It is I, Baron Chandore."
The bars were removed instantly, and the old valet showed himself in the door. He looked pale and undone. The disordered condition of his beard, his hair, and his dress, showed that he had not been to bed. And this disorder was full of meaning in a man who ordinarily prided himself upon appearing always in the dress of an English gentleman.
M. de Chandore was so struck by this, that he asked, first of all,--
"What is the matter with you, my good Anthony?"
Instead of replying, Anthony drew the baron and his companion inside; and, when he had fastened the door again, he crossed his arms, and said,--
"The matter is--well, I am afraid."
The old gentleman and the lawyer looked at each other. They evidently both thought the poor man had lost his mind. Anthony saw it, and said quickly,--
"No, I am not mad, although, certainly, there are things pa.s.sing here which could make one doubtful of one"s own senses. If I am afraid, it is for good reasons."
"You do not doubt your master?" asked M. Folgat.
The servant cast such fierce, threatening glances at the lawyer, that M.
de Chandore hastened to interfere.
"My dear Anthony," he said, "this gentleman is a friend of mine, a lawyer, who has come down from Paris with the marchioness to defend Jacques. You need not mistrust him, nay, more than that, you must tell him all you know, even if"--
The trusty old servant"s face brightened up, and he exclaimed,--
"Ah! If the gentleman is a lawyer. Welcome, sir. Now I can say all that weighs on my heart. No, most a.s.suredly I do not think Master Jacques guilty. It is impossible he should be so: it is absurd to think of it.
But what I believe, what I am sure of, is this,--there is a plot to charge him with all the horrors of Valpinson."