<h3>CHAPTER XIII</h3>
<p>The examination was now over, and, the dispositions having been
drawn up and signed, the investigating officials remained for some
time in conference.</p>
<p>"It lies with those three, of course--the two women and the
Italian. They are jointly, conjointly concerned, although the
exact degrees of guilt cannot quite be apportioned," said the
detective.</p>
<p>"And all three are at large!" added the Judge.</p>
<p>"If you will issue warrants for arrest, M. le Juge, we can take
them--two of them at any rate--when we choose."</p>
<p>"That should be at once," remarked the Commissary, eager, as
usual, for decisive action.</p>
<p>"Very well. Let us proceed in that way. Prepare the warrants," said
the Judge, turning to his clerk. "And you," he went on, addressing
M. Flo�on, "dear colleague, will you see to their execution? Madame
is at the H�tel Madagascar; that will be easy. The Italian Ripaldi
we shall hear of through your inspector Block. As for the maid,
Hortense Petitpr�, we must search for her. That too, sir, you will
of course undertake?"</p>
<p>"I will charge myself with it, certainly. My man should be here by
now, and I will instruct him at once. Ask for him," said M. Flo�on
to the guard whom he called in.</p>
<p>"The inspector is there," said the guard, pointing to the outer
room. "He has just returned."</p>
<p>"Returned? You mean arrived."</p>
<p>"No, monsieur, returned. It is Block, who left an hour or more
ago."</p>
<p>"Block? Then something has happened--he has some special
information, some great news! Shall we see him, M. le Juge?"</p>
<p>When Block appeared, it was evident that something had gone wrong
with him. His face wore a look of hot, flurried excitement, and
his manner was one of abject, cringing self-abasement.</p>
<p>"What is it?" asked the little Chief, sharply. "You are alone.
Where is your man?"</p>
<p>"Alas, monsieur! how shall I tell you? He has gone--disappeared! I
have lost him!"</p>
<p>"Impossible! You cannot mean it! Gone, now, just when we most want
him? Never!"</p>
<p>"It is so, unhappily."</p>
<p>"Idiot! _Triple_ idiot! You shall be dismissed, discharged from
this hour. You are a disgrace to the force." M. Flo�on raved
furiously at his abashed subordinate, blaming him a little too
harshly and unfairly, forgetting that until quite recently there
had been no strong suspicion against the Italian. We are apt at
times to expect others to be intuitively possessed of knowledge
that has only come to us at a much later date.</p>
<p>"How was it? Explain. Of course you have been drinking. It is
that, or your great gluttony. You were beguiled into some
eating-house."</p>
<p>"Monsieur, you shall hear the exact truth. When we started more
than an hour ago, our fiacre took the usual route, by the Quais
and along the riverside. My gentleman made himself most pleasant"</p>
<p>"No doubt," growled the Chief.</p>
<p>"Offered me an excellent cigar, and talked--not about the affair,
you understand--but of Paris, the theatres, the races, Longchamps,
Auteuil, the grand restaurants. He knew everything, all Paris,
like his pocket. I was much surprised, but he told me his business
often brought him here. He had been employed to follow up several
great Italian criminals, and had made a number of important
arrests in Paris."</p>
<p>"Get on, get on! come to the essential."</p>
<p>"Well, in the middle of the journey, when we were about the Pont
Henri Quatre, he said, 'Figure to yourself, my friend, that it is
now near noon, that nothing has passed my lips since before
daylight at Laroche. What say you? Could you eat a mouthful, just
a scrap on the thumb-nail? Could you?'"</p>
<p>"And you--greedy, gormandizing beast!--you agreed?"</p>
<p>"My faith, monsieur, I too was hungry. It was my regular hour.
Well--at any rate, for my sins I accepted. We entered the first
restaurant, that of the 'Reunited Friends,' you know it, perhaps,
monsieur? A good house, especially noted for tripe _� la mode de
Caen_." In spite of his anguish, Block smacked his fat lips at
the thought of this most succulent but very greasy dish.</p>
<p>"How often must I tell you to get on?"</p>
<p>"Forgive me, monsieur, but it is all part of my story. We had
oysters, two dozen Marennes, and a glass or two of Chablis; then a
good portion of tripe, and with them a bottle, only one, monsieur,
of Pontet Canet; after that a beefsteak with potatoes and a little
Burgundy, then a rum omelet."</p>
<p>"Great Heavens! you should be the fat man in a fair, not an agent
of the Detective Bureau."</p>
<p>"It was all this that helped me to my destruction. He ate, this
devilish Italian, like three, and I too, I was so hungry,--forgive
me, sir,--I did my share. But by the time we reached the cheese, a
fine, ripe Camembert, had our coffee, and one thimbleful of green
Chartreuse, I was _plein jusqu'au bec_, gorged up to the beak."</p>
<p>"And what of your duty, your service, pray?"</p>
<p>"I did think of it, monsieur, but then, he, the Italian, was just
the same as myself. He was a colleague. I had no fear of him, not
till the very last, when he played me this evil turn. I suspected
nothing when he brought out his pocketbook,--it was stuffed full,
monsieur; I saw that and my confidence increased,--called for the
reckoning, and paid with an Italian bank-note. The waiter looked
doubtful at the foreign money, and went out to consult the
manager. A minute after, my man got up, saying:</p>
<p>"'There may be some trouble about changing that bank-note. Excuse
me one moment, pray.' He went out, monsieur, and piff-paff, he was
no more to be seen."</p>
<p>"Ah, _nigaud_ (ass), you are too foolish to live! Why did you
not follow him? Why let him out of your sight?"</p>
<p>"But, monsieur, I was not to know, was I? I was to accompany him,
not to watch him. I have done wrong, I confess. But then, who was
to tell he meant to run away?"</p>
<p>M. Flo�on could not deny the justice of this defence. It was only
now, at the eleventh hour, that the Italian had become inculpated,
and the question of his possible anxiety to escape had never been
considered.</p>
<p>"He was so artful," went on Block in further extenuation of his
offence. "He left everything behind. His overcoat, stick, this
book--his own private memorandum-book seemingly--"</p>
<p>"Book? Hand it me," said the Chief, and when it came into his
hands he began to turn over the leaves hurriedly.</p>
<p>It was a small brass-bound note-book or diary, and was full of
close writing in pencil.</p>
<p>"I do not understand, not more than a word here and there. It is
no doubt Italian. Do you know that language, M. le Juge?"</p>
<p>"Not perfectly, but I can read it. Allow me."</p>
<p>He also turned over the pages, pausing to read a passage here and
there, and nodding his head from time to time, evidently struck
with the importance of the matter recorded.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, M. Flo�on continued an angry conversation with his
offending subordinate.</p>
<p>"You will have to find him, Block, and that speedily, within
twenty-four hours,--to-day, indeed,--or I will break you like a
stick, and send you into the gutter. Of course, such a consummate
ass as you have proved yourself would not think of searching the
restaurant or the immediate neighbourhood, or of making inquiries
as to whether he had been seen, or as to which way he had gone?"</p>
<p>"Pardon me, monsieur is too hard on me. I have been unfortunate, a
victim to circumstances, still I believe I know my duty. Yes, I made
inquiries, and, what is more, I heard of him."</p>
<p>"Where? how?" asked the Chief, gruffly, but obviously much
interested.</p>
<p>"He never spoke to the manager, but walked out and let the change
go. It was a note for a hundred _lire_, a hundred francs, and
the restaurant bill was no more than seventeen francs."</p>
<p>"Hah! that is greatly against him indeed."</p>
<p>"He was much pressed, in a great hurry. Directly he crossed the
threshold he called the first cab and was driving away, but he was
stopped--"</p>
<p>"The devil! Why did they not keep him, then?"</p>
<p>"Stopped, but only for a moment, and accosted by a woman."</p>
<p>"A woman?"</p>
<p>"Yes, monsieur. They exchanged but three words. He wished to pass
on, to leave her, she would not consent, then they both got into
the cab and were driven away together."</p>
<p>The officials were now listening with all ears.</p>
<p>"Tell me," said the Chief, "quick, this woman--what was she like?
Did you get her description?"</p>
<p>"Tall, slight, well formed, dressed all in black. Her face--it was
a policeman who saw her, and he said she was good-looking, dark,
brunette, black hair."</p>
<p>"It is the maid herself!" cried the little Chief, springing up and
slapping his thigh in exuberant glee. "The maid! the missing
maid!"</p>
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