Within an Inch of His Life

Home > Literature > Within an Inch of His Life > Page 1
Within an Inch of His Life Page 1

by Emile Gaboriau




  Produced by Dagny; John Bickers

  WITHIN AN INCH OF HIS LIFE

  by Emile Gaboriau

  PREPARER'S NOTE

  This text was prepared from a 1913 edition, published by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York.

  FIRST PART--FIRE AT VALPINSON

  These were the facts:--

  I.

  In the night from the 22nd to the 23rd of June, 1871, towards oneo'clock in the morning, the Paris suburb of Sauveterre, the principaland most densely populated suburb of that pretty town, was startled bythe furious gallop of a horse on its ill-paved streets.

  A number of peaceful citizens rushed to the windows.

  The dark night allowed these only to see a peasant in his shirt sleeves,and bareheaded, who belabored a large gray mare, on which he rodebareback, with his heels and a huge stick.

  This man, after having passed the suburbs, turned into National Street,formerly Imperial Street, crossed New-Market Square, and stopped at lastbefore the fine house which stands at the corner of Castle Street.

  This was the house of the mayor of Sauveterre, M. Seneschal, a formerlawyer, and now a member of the general council.

  Having alighted, the peasant seized the bell-knob, and began to ring sofuriously, that, in a few moments, the whole house was in an uproar.

  A minute later, a big, stout servant-man, his eyes heavy with sleep,came and opened the door, and then cried out in an angry voice,--

  "Who are you, my man? What do you want? Have you taken too much wine?Don't you know at whose house you are making such a row?"

  "I wish to see the mayor," replied the peasant instantly. "Wake him up!"

  M. Seneschal was wide awake.

  Dressed in a large dressing-gown of gray flannel, a candlestick in hishand, troubled, and unable to disguise his trouble, he had just comedown into the hall, and heard all that was said.

  "Here is the mayor," he said in an ill-satisfied tone. "What do you wantof him at this hour, when all honest people are in bed?"

  Pushing the servant aside, the peasant came up to him, and said, makingnot the slightest attempt at politeness,--

  "I come to tell you to send the fire-engine."

  "The engine!"

  "Yes; at once. Make haste!"

  The mayor shook his head.

  "Hm!" he said, according to a habit he had when he was at a loss what todo; "hm, hm!"

  And who would not have been embarrassed in his place?

  To get the engine out, and to assemble the firemen, he had to rouse thewhole town; and to do this in the middle of the night was nothing lessthan to frighten the poor people of Sauveterre, who had heard the drumsbeating the alarm but too often during the war with the Germans, andthen again during the reign of the Commune. Therefore M. Seneschalasked,--

  "Is it a serious fire?"

  "Serious!" exclaimed the peasant. "How could it be otherwise with such awind as this,--a wind that would blow off the horns of our oxen."

  "Hm!" uttered the mayor again. "Hm, hm!"

  It was not exactly the first time, since he was mayor of Sauveterre,that he was thus roused by a peasant, who came and cried under hiswindow, "Help! Fire, fire!"

  At first, filled with compassion, he had hastily called out the firemen,put himself at their head, and hurried to the fire.

  And when they reached it, out of breath, and perspiring, after havingmade two or three miles at double-quick, they found what? A wretchedheap of straw, worth about ten dollars, and almost consumed by the fire.They had had their trouble for nothing.

  The peasants in the neighborhood had cried, "Wolf!" so often, when therewas no reason for it, that, even when the wolf really was there, thetownspeople were slow in believing it.

  "Let us see," said M. Seneschal: "what is burning?"

  The peasant seemed to be furious at all these delays, and bit his longwhip.

  "Must I tell you again and again," he said, "that every thing is onfire,--barns, outhouses, haystacks, the houses, the old castle, andevery thing? If you wait much longer, you won't find one stone uponanother in Valpinson."

  The effect produced by this name was prodigious.

  "What?" asked the mayor in a half-stifled voice, "Valpinson is on fire?"

  "Yes."

  "At Count Claudieuse's?"

  "Of course."

  "Fool! Why did you not say so at once?" exclaimed the mayor.

  He hesitated no longer.

  "Quick!" he said to his servant, "go and get me my clothes. Wait, no!my wife can help me. There is no time to be lost. You run to Bolton, thedrummer, you know, and tell him from me to beat the alarm instantly allover town. Then you run to Capt. Parenteau's, and explainto him what you have heard. Ask him to get the keys of theengine-house.--Wait!--when you have done that, come back and put thehorse in.--Fire at Valpinson! I shall go with the engine. Go, run,knock at every door, cry, 'Fire! Fire!' Tell everybody to come to theNew-Market Square."

  When the servant had run off as fast as he could, the mayor turned tothe peasant, and said,--

  "And you, my good man, you get on your horse, and reassure the count.Tell them all to take courage, not to give up; we are coming to helpthem."

  But the peasant did not move.

  "Before going back to Valpinson," he said, "I have another commission toattend to in town."

  "Why? What is it?"

  "I am to get the doctor to go back with me."

  "The doctor! Why? Has anybody been hurt?"

  "Yes, master, Count Claudieuse."

  "How imprudent! I suppose he rushed into danger as usually."

  "Oh, no! He has been shot twice!"

  The mayor of Sauveterre nearly dropped his candlestick.

  "Shot! Twice!" he said. "Where? When? By whom?"

  "Ah! I don't know."

  "But"--

  "All I can tell you is this. They have carried him into a little barnthat was not on fire yet. There I saw him myself lying on the straw,pale like a linen sheet, his eyes closed, and bloody all over."

  "Great God! They have not killed him?"

  "He was not dead when I left."

  "And the countess?"

  "Our lady," replied the peasant with an accent of profound veneration,"was in the barn on her knees by the count's side, washing his woundswith fresh water. The two little ladies were there too."

  M. Seneschal trembled with excitement.

  "It is a crime that has been committed, I suppose."

  "Why, of course!"

  "But who did it? What was the motive?"

  "Ah! that is the question."

  "The count is very passionate, to be sure, quite violent, in fact; butstill he is the best and fairest of men, everybody knows that."

  "Everybody knows it."

  "He never did any harm to anybody."

  "That is what all say."

  "As for the countess"--

  "Oh!" said the peasant eagerly, "she is the saint of saints."

  The mayor tried to come to some conclusion.

  "The criminal, therefore, must be a stranger. We are overrun withvagabonds and beggars on the tramp. There is not a day on which a lot ofill-looking fellows do not appear at my office, asking for help to getaway."

  The peasant nodded his head, and said,--

  "That is what I think. And the proof of it is, that, as I came along, Imade up my mind I would first get the doctor, and then report the crimeat the police office."

  "Never mind," said the mayor. "I will do that myself. In ten minutesI shall see the attorney of the Commonwealth. Now go. Don't spare yourhorse, and tell your mistress that we are all coming after you."

  In his whole official career M. Seneschal had never been so terriblyshocked. He lost his
head, just as he did on that unlucky day, when, allof a sudden, nine hundred militia-men fell upon him, and asked to befed and lodged. Without his wife's help he would never have been able todress himself. Still he was ready when his servant returned.

  The good fellow had done all he had been told to do, and at that momentthe beat of the drum was heard in the upper part of the town.

  "Now, put the horse in," said M. Seneschal: "let me find the carriage atthe door when I come back."

  In the streets he found all in an uproar. At every window a head poppedout, full of curiosity or terror; on all sides house doors were opened,and promptly closed again.

  "Great God!" he thought, "I hope I shall find Daubigeon at home!" M.Daubigeon, who had been first in the service of the empire, and then inthe service of the republic, was one of M. Seneschal's best friends.He was a man of about forty years, with a cunning look in his eye, apermanent smile on his face, and a confirmed bachelor, with no smallpride in his consistency. The good people of Sauveterre thought he didnot look stern and solemn enough for his profession. To be sure he wasvery highly esteemed; but his optimism was not popular; they reproachedhim for being too kind-hearted, too reluctant to press criminals whom hehad to prosecute, and thus prone to encourage evil-doers.

  He accused himself of not being inspired with the "holy fire," and, ashe expressed it in his own way, "of robbing Themis of all the time hecould, to devote it to the friendly Muses." He was a passionate lover offine books, rare editions, costly bindings, and fine illustrations; andmuch the larger part of his annual income of about ten thousand francswent to buying books. A scholar of the old-fashioned type, he professedboundless admiration for Virgil and Juvenal, but, above all, for Horace,and proved his devotion by constant quotations.

  Roused, like everybody else in the midst of his slumbers, this excellentman hastened to put on his clothes, when his old housekeeper came in,quite excited, and told him that M. Seneschal was there, and wanted tosee him.

  "Show him in!" he said, "show him in!"

  And, as soon as the mayor entered, he continued:--

  "For you will be able to tell me the meaning of all this noise, thisbeating of drums,--

  "'Clamorque, virum, clangorque tubarum.'"

  "A terrible misfortune has happened," answered the mayor. From the toneof his voice one might have imagined it was he himself who had beenafflicted; and the lawyer was so strongly impressed in this way, that hesaid,--

  "My dear friend, what is the matter? _Quid?_ Courage, my friend, keepcool! Remember that the poet advises us, in misfortune never to lose ourbalance of mind:--

  "'AEquam, memento, rebus in arduis, Sevare mentem.'"

  "Incendiaries have set Valpinson on fire!" broke in the mayor.

  "You do not say so? Great God!

  "'Jupiter, Quod verbum audio.'"

  "More than that. Count Claudieuse has been shot, and by this time he isprobably dead."

  "Oh!"

  "You hear the drummer is beating the alarm. I am going to the fire; andI have only come here to report the matter officially to you, and to askyou to see to it that justice be done promptly and energetically."

  There was no need of such a serious appeal to stop at once all thelawyer's quotations.

  "Enough!" he said eagerly. "Come, let us take measures to catch thewretches."

  When they reached National Street, it was as full as at mid-day; forSauveterre is one of those rare provincial towns in which an excitementis too rare a treat to be neglected. The sad event had by this timebecome fully known everywhere. At first the news had been doubted; butwhen the doctor's cab had passed the crowd at full speed, escorted bya peasant on horseback, the reports were believed. Nor had the firemenlost time. As soon as the mayor and M. Daubigeon appeared on New-MarketSquare, Capt. Parenteau rushed up to them, and, touching his helmet witha military salute, said,--

  "My men are ready."

  "All?"

  "There are hardly ten absentees. When they heard that Count and CountessClaudieuse were in need--great heavens!--you know, they all were readyin a moment."

  "Well, then, start and make haste," commanded M. Seneschal. "We shallovertake you on the way: M. Daubigeon and I are going to pick up M.Galpin, the magistrate."

  They had not far to go.

  The magistrate had already been looking for them all over town: he wasjust appearing on the Square, and saw them at once.

  In striking contrast with the commonwealth attorney, M. Galpin was aprofessional man in the full sense of the word, and perhaps a littlemore. He was the magistrate all over, from head to foot, and from thegaiters on his ankles to the light blonde whiskers on his face. Althoughhe was quite young, yet no one had ever seen him smile, or heard himmake a joke. He was so very stiff that M. Daubigeon suggested he hadbeen impaled alive on the sword of justice.

  At Sauveterre M. Galpin was looked upon as a superior man. He certainlybelieved it himself: hence he was very impatient at being confined to sonarrow a sphere of action, and thought his brilliant ability wastedupon the prosecution of a chicken-thief or a poacher. But hisalmost desperate efforts to secure a better office had always beenunsuccessful. In vain he had enlisted a host of friends in his behalf.In vain he had thrown himself into politics, ready to serve any partythat would serve him.

  But M. Galpin's ambition was not easily discouraged, and lately after ajourney to Paris, he had thrown out hints at a great match, which wouldshortly procure him that influence in high places which so far he hadbeen unable to obtain. When he joined M. Daubigeon and the mayor, hesaid,--

  "Well, this is a horrible affair! It will make a tremendous noise." Themayor began to give him the details, but he said,--

  "Don't trouble yourself. I know all you know. I met the peasant who hadbeen sent in, and I have examined him."

  Then, turning to the commonwealth attorney, he added,--

  "I think we ought to proceed at once to the place where the crime hasbeen committed."

  "I was going to suggest it to you," replied M. Daubigeon.

  "The gendarmes ought to be notified."

  "M. Seneschal has just sent them word."

  The magistrate was so much excited, that his cold impassiveness actuallythreatened to give way for once.

  "There has been an attempt at murder."

  "Evidently."

  "Then we can act in concert, and side by side, each one in his own lineof duty, you examining, and I preparing for the trial."

  An ironical smile passed over the lips of the commonwealth attorney.

  "You ought to know me well enough," he said, "to be sure that I havenever interfered with your duties and privileges. I am nothing but agood old fellow, a friend of peace and of studies.

  "'Sum piger et senior, Pieridumque comes.'"

  "Then," exclaimed M. Seneschal, "nothing keeps us here any longer. I amimpatient to be off; my carriage is ready; let us go!"

 

‹ Prev