<h3>CHAPTER XVII</h3>
<p>Sir Charles Collingham and his escort, M. Flo�on, entered a cab
together and were driven first to the Faubourg St. Honor�. The
General tried hard to maintain his nonchalance, but he was yet a
little crestfallen at the turn things had taken, and M. Flo�on,
who, on the other hand, was elated and triumphant, saw it. But no
words passed between them until they arrived at the portals of the
British Embassy, and the General handed out his card to the
magnificent porter who received them.</p>
<p>"Kindly let Colonel Papillon have that without delay." The General
had written a few words: "I have got into fresh trouble. Come on
to me at the Police Prefecture if you can spare the time."</p>
<p>"The Colonel is now in the Chancery: will not monsieur wait?"
asked the porter, with superb civility.</p>
<p>But the detective would not suffer this, and interposed, answering
abruptly for Sir Charles:</p>
<p>"No. It is impossible. We are going to the Quai l'Horloge. It is
an urgent matter."</p>
<p>The porter knew what the Quai l'Horloge meant, and he guessed
intuitively who was speaking. Every Frenchman can recognize a
police officer, and has, as a rule, no great opinion of him.</p>
<p>"Very well!" now said the porter, curtly, as he banged the
wicket-gate on the retreating cab, and he did not hurry himself
in giving the card to Colonel Papillon.</p>
<p>"Does this mean that I am a prisoner?" asked Sir Charles, his
gorge rising, as it did easily.</p>
<p>"It means, monsieur, that you are in the hands of justice until
your recent conduct has been fully explained," said the detective,
with the air of a despot.</p>
<p>"But I protest--"</p>
<p>"I wish to hear no further observations, monsieur. You may reserve
them till you can give them to the right person."</p>
<p>The General's temper was sorely ruffled. He did not like it at
all; yet what could he do? Prudence gained the day, and after a
struggle he decided to submit, lest worse might befall him.</p>
<p>There was, in truth, worse to be encountered. It was very irksome
to be in the power of this now domineering little man on his own
ground, and eager to show his power. It was with a very bad grace
that Sir Charles obeyed the curt orders he received, to leave the
cab, to enter at a side door of the Prefecture, to follow this
pompous conductor along the long vaulted passages of this rambling
building, up many flights of stone stairs, to halt obediently at
his command when at length they reached a closed door on an upper
story.</p>
<p>"It is here!" said M. Flo�on, as he turned the handle
unceremoniously without knocking. "Enter."</p>
<p>A man was seated at a small desk in the centre of a big bare room,
who rose at once at the sight of M. Flo�on, and bowed deferentially
without speaking.</p>
<p>"Baume," said the Chief, shortly, "I wish to leave this gentleman
with you. Make him at home,"--the words were spoken in manifest
irony,--"and when I call you, bring him at once to my cabinet.
You, monsieur, you will oblige me by staying here."</p>
<p>Sir Charles nodded carelessly, took the first chair that offered,
and sat down by the fire.</p>
<p>He was to all intents and purposes in custody, and he examined his
gaoler at first wrathfully, then curiously, struck with his rather
strange figure and appearance. Baume, as the Chief had called him,
was a short, thick-set man with a great shock head sunk in low
between a pair of enormous shoulders, betokening great physical
strength; he stood on very thin but greatly twisted bow legs, and
the quaintness of his figure was emphasized by the short black
blouse or smock-frock he wore over his other clothes like a French
artisan.</p>
<p>He was a man of few words, and those not the most polite in tone,
for when the General began with a banal remark about the weather,
M. Baume replied, shortly:</p>
<p>"I wish to have no talk;" and when Sir Charles pulled out his
cigarette-case, as he did almost automatically from time to time
when in any situation of annoyance or perplexity, Baume raised his
hand warningly and grunted:</p>
<p>"Not allowed."</p>
<p>"Then I'll be hanged if I don't smoke in spite of every man jack
of you!" cried the General, hotly, rising from his seat and
speaking unconsciously in English.</p>
<p>"What's that?" asked Baume, gruffly. He was one of the detective
staff, and was only doing his duty according to his lights, and he
said so with such an injured air that the General was pacified,
laughed, and relapsed into silence without lighting his cigarette.</p>
<p>The time ran on, from minutes into nearly an hour, a very trying
wait for Sir Charles. There is always something irritating in
doing antechamber work, in kicking one's heels in the waiting-room
of any functionary or official, high or low, and the General found
it hard to possess himself in patience, when he thought he was
being thus ignominiously treated by a man like M. Flo�on. All the
time, too, he was worrying himself about the Countess, wondering
first how she had fared; next, where she was just then; last of
all, and longest, whether it was possible for her to be mixed up
in anything compromising or criminal.</p>
<p>Suddenly an electric bell struck in the room. There was a table
telephone at Baume's elbow; he took up the handle, put the tube to
his mouth and ear, got his message answered, and then, rising,
said abruptly to Sir Charles:</p>
<p>"Come."</p>
<p>When the General was at last ushered into the presence of the
Chief of the Detective Police, he found to his satisfaction that
Colonel Papillon was also there, and at M. Flo�on's side sat the
instructing judge, M. Beaumont le Hardi, who, after waiting
politely until the two Englishmen had exchanged greetings, was the
first to speak, and in apology.</p>
<p>"You will, I trust, pardon us, M. le G�n�ral, for having detained
you here and so long. But there were, as we thought, good and
sufficient reasons. If those have now lost some of their cogency,
we still stand by our action as having been justifiable in the
execution of our duty. We are now willing to let you go free,
because--because--"</p>
<p>"We have caught the person, the lady you helped to escape,"
blurted out the detective, unable to resist making the point.</p>
<p>"The Countess? Is she here, in custody? Never!"</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly she is in custody, and in very close custody too,"
went on M. Flo�on, gleefully. "_ Au secret_, if you know what
that means--in a cell separate and apart, where no one is
permitted to see or speak to her."</p>
<p>"Surely not that? Jack--Papillon--this must not be. I beg of you,
implore, insist, that you will get his lordship to interpose."</p>
<p>"But, sir, how can I? You must not ask impossibilities. The
Contessa Castagneto is really an Italian subject now."</p>
<p>"She is English by birth, and whether or no, she is a woman, a
high-bred lady; and it is abominable, unheard-of, to subject her
to such monstrous treatment," said the General.</p>
<p>"But these gentlemen declare that they are fully warranted, that
she has put herself in the wrong--greatly, culpably in the wrong."</p>
<p>"I don't believe it!" cried the General, indignantly. "Not from
these chaps, a pack of idiots, always on the wrong tack! I don't
believe a word, not if they swear."</p>
<p>"But they have documentary evidence--papers of the most damaging
kind against her."</p>
<p>"Where? How?"</p>
<p>"He--M. le Juge--has been showing me a note-book;" and the
General's eyes, following Jack Papillon's, were directed to a
small _carnet_, or memorandum-book, which the Judge, interpreting
the glance, was tapping significantly with his finger.</p>
<p>Then the Judge said blandly, "It is easy to perceive that you
protest, M. le G�n�ral, against that lady's arrest. Is it so?
Well, we are not called upon to justify it to you, not in the very
least. But we are dealing with a brave man, a gentleman, an
officer of high rank and consideration, and you shall know things
that we are not bound to tell, to you or to any one."</p>
<p>"First," he continued, holding up the note-book, "do you know what
this is? Have you ever seen it before?"</p>
<p>"I am dimly conscious of the fact, and yet I cannot say when or
where."</p>
<p>"It is the property of one of your fellow travellers--an Italian
called Ripaldi."</p>
<p>"Ripaldi?" said the General, remembering with some uneasiness that
he had seen the name at the bottom of the Countess's telegram.
"Ah! now I understand."</p>
<p>"You had heard of it, then? In what connection?" asked the Judge,
a little carelessly, but it was a suddenly planned pitfall.</p>
<p>"I now understand," replied the General, perfectly on his guard,
"why the note-book was familiar to me. I had seen it in that man's
hands in the waiting-room. He was writing in it."</p>
<p>"Indeed? A favourite occupation evidently. He was fond of
confiding in that note-book, and committed to it much that he
never expected would see the light--his movements, intentions,
ideas, even his inmost thoughts. The book--which he no doubt lost
inadvertently is very incriminating to himself and his friends."</p>
<p>"What do you imply?" hastily inquired Sir Charles.</p>
<p>"Simply that it is on that which is written here that we base one
part, perhaps the strongest, of our case against the Countess.
It is strangely but convincingly corroborative of our suspicions
against her."</p>
<p>"May I look at it for myself?" went on the General in a tone of
contemptuous disbelief.</p>
<p>"It is in Italian. Perhaps you can read that language? If not, I
have translated the most important passages," said the Judge,
offering some other papers.</p>
<p>"Thank you; if you will permit me, I should prefer to look at the
original;" and the General, without more ado, stretched out his
hand and took the note-book.</p>
<p>What he read there, as he quickly scanned its pages, shall be told
in the next chapter. It will be seen that there were things
written that looked very damaging to his dear friend, Sabine
Castagneto.</p>
<br/><br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />