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âThe murder of the Rue Montorgueilâthat clerk who killed his sweetheart, a little brewery maid?â
âThe very same. Joseph was attracted by the cries, saw the murderer arrested, and after the police were gone stayed there in the street, talking and jabbering. The Saturday before, Joseph had a game of billiards with the murderer.â
âWith the murderer!â
âOh! accidentallyâhe knew him by sight, went to the same cafĂ©, thatâs all, and they had played at pool together, Joseph and the murdererâa man named Nicot. Joseph told this to the crowd, and you may well imagine how important that made him, when suddenly a little blond man seized him. âYou know the murderer?â âA little, not much; I played pool with him.â âAnd do you know the motive of the crime?â âIt was love, Monsieur, love; Nicot had met a girl, named EugĂ©nieââ âYou knew the victim, too?â âOnly by sight, she was there in the cafĂ© the night we played.â âVery well; but donât tell that to anybody; come, come, quick.â He took possession of Joseph and made him get into a cab, which went rolling off at great speed down the Boulevard des Italiens. Ten minutes after, Joseph found himself in a hall where there was a big table, around which five or six young men were writing. âHere is a fine sensation,â said the little blond on entering. âThe best kind of a murder! a murder for love, in the Rue Montorgueil, and I have here the murdererâs most intimate friend.â âNo, not at all,â cried Joseph, âI scarcely know him.â âBe still,â whispered the little blond to Joseph; then he continued, âYes, his most intimate friend. They were brought up together, and a quarter of an hour before the crime was committed were playing billiards. The murderer won, he was perfectly calmâââ âThatâs not it, it was last Saturday that I played withâââ âBe still, will you! A quarter of an hour, it is more to the point. Letâs go. Come, come.â He took Joseph into a small room where they were alone, and said to him: âThat affair ought to make about a hundred linesâyou talkâIâll writeâthere will be twenty francs for you.â âTwenty francs!â âYes, and here they are in advance; but be quick, to business!â Joseph told all he knew to the gentlemanâhow an old and retired Colonel, who lived in the house where the murder was committed, was the first to hear the victimâs cries; but he was paralyzed in both limbs, this old Colonel, and could only ring for the servant, an old cuirassier, who arrested the assassin. In short, with all the information concerning the game of billiards, EugĂ©nie and the paralytic old Colonel, the man composed his little article, and sent Joseph away with twenty francs. Do you think it ended there?â
âI donât think anythingâI am amazed! Little Joseph a reporter!â
âHardly had Joseph stepped outside, when another man seized himâa tall, dark fellow. âIâve been watching for you,â he said to Joseph. âYou were present when the murder was committed in the Rue Montorgueil!â âWhy, no, I was not presentâââ âThat will do. I am well informed, come.â âWhere to?â âTo my newspaper office.â âWhat for?â âTo tell me about the murder.â âBut Iâve already told all I know, there, in that house.â âCome, you will still remember a few more little incidentsâand I will give you twenty francs.â âTwenty francs!â âCome, come.â Another hall, another table, more young men writing, and again Joseph was interrogated. He recommenced the history of the old Colonel. âIs that what you told them down there?â inquired the tall, dark man of Joseph. âYes, Monsieur.â âThat needs some revision, then.â And the tall, dark man made up a long story. How this old Colonel had been paralyzed for fourteen years, but on hearing the victimâs heartrending screams, received such a shock that all at once, as if by a miracle, had recovered the use of his legs; and it was he who had started out in pursuit of the murderer and had him arrested.
âWhile dashing this off with one stroke of his pen, the man exclaimed: âGood! this is perfect! a hundred times better than the other account.â âYes,â said Joseph, âbut it is not true.â âNot true for you, because you are acquainted with the affair; but for our hundred thousand readers, who do not know about it, it will be true enough. They were not there, those hundred thousand readers. What do they want? A striking accountâwell! they shall have it!â And thereupon he discharged Joseph, who went home with his forty francs, and who naturally did not boast of his escapade. It is only of late that he has acknowledged it. However, from that day Joseph has shown less interest in the pharmacy. He bought a number of penny papers, and shut himself up in his room to writeâno one knows what. At last he wore a business-like aspect, which was very funny. About six months ago I went to Paris to collect the dividends on my Northern stock.â
âThe Northern is doing very well; it went up this weekâââ
âOh! itâs good stock. Well, I had collected my dividends and had left the Northern Railway Station. It was beautiful weather, so I walked slowly down the Rue Lafayette. (I have a habit of strolling a little in Paris after I have collected my dividends.) When at the corner of the Faubourg Montmartre, whom should I see but my nephew, Joseph, all alone in a victoria, playing the fine gentleman. I saw very well that he turned his head away, the vagabond! But I overtook the carriage and stopped the driver. âWhat are you doing there?â âA little drive, uncle.â âWait, I will go with you,â and in I climbed. âHurry up,â said the driver, âor Iâll lose the trail.â âWhat trail?â âWhy, the two cabs we are following.â The man drove at a furious rate, and I asked Joseph why he was there in that victoria, following two cabs. âMon Dieu, uncle,â he replied, âthere was a foreigner, a Spaniard, who came to our place in the Rue Montorgueil and bought a large amount of drugs, and has not paid us, so I am going after him to find out if he has not given us a wrong address.â âAnd that Spaniard is in both the cabs?â âNo, uncle, he is only in one, the first.â âAnd who is in the second?â âI donât know, probably another creditor, like myself, in pursuit of the Spaniard.â âWell, I am going to stay with you; I have two hours to myself before the train leaves at five oâclock and I adore this sort of thing, riding around Paris in an open carriage. Letâs follow the Spaniard!â And then the chase commenced, down the boulevards, across the squares, through the streets, the three drivers cracking their whips and urging their horses on. This man-hunt began to get exciting. It recalled to my mind the romances in the Petit Journal. Finally, in a little street, belonging to the Temple Quarter, the first cab stopped.â
âThe Spaniard?â
âYes. A man got out of itâhe had a large hat drawn down over his eyes and a big muffler wrapped about his neck. Presently three gentlemen, who had jumped from the second cab, rushed upon that man. I wanted to do the same, but Joseph tried to prevent me. âDonât stir, uncle!â âWhy not? But they are going to deprive us of the Spaniard!â And I dashed forward. âTake care, uncle, donât be mixed up in that affair.â But I was already gone. When I arrived they were putting the handcuffs on the Spaniard. I broke through the crowd which had collected, and cried, âWait, Messieurs, wait; I also demand a settlement with this man.â They made way for me. âYou know this man?â asked one of the gentlemen from the second cab, a short, stout fellow. âPerfectly; he is a Spaniard.â âI a Spaniard!â âYes, a Spaniard.â âGood,â said the short, stout man, âHereâs the witness!â and, addressing himself to one of the men, âTake Monsieur to the Prefecture immediately.â âBut I have not the time; I live in Versailles; my wife expects me by the five oâclock train, and we have company to dinner, and I must take home a pie. I will come back to-morrow at any hour you wish.â âNo remarks,â said the short, stout man, âbut be off; I am the Police Commissioner.â âBut, Monsieur the Commissioner, I know nothing about it; it is my nephew Joseph who will tell you,â and I called âJoseph! Joseph!â but no Joseph came.â
âHe had decamped?â
âWith the victoria. They packed me in one of the two cabs with the detective, a charming man and very distinguished. Arriving at the Prefecture, they deposited me in a small apartment filled with vagabonds, criminals, and low, ignorant people. An hour after they came for me in order to bring me up for examination.â
âYou were brought up for examination?â
âYes, my dear Monsieur, I was. A policeman conducted me through the Palais de Justice, before the magistrate, a lean man, who asked me my name and address. I replied that I lived in Versailles, and that I had company to dinner; he interrupted me, âYou know the prisoner?â pointing to the man with the muffler, âSpeak up.â But he questioned me so threateningly that I became disconcerted, for I felt that he was passing judgment upon me. Then in my embarrassment the words did not come quickly. I finished, moreover, by telling him that I knew the man without knowing him; then he became furious: âWhatâs that you say? You know a man without knowing him! At least explain yourself!â I was all of a tremble, and said that I knew he was a Spaniard, but the man replied that he was not a Spaniard. âWell, well,â said the Judge. âDenial, always denial; it is your way.â âI tell you that my name is Rigaud, and that I was born in Josey, in Josas; they are not Spaniards that are born in Josey, in Josas.â âAlways contradiction; very good, very good!â And the Judge addressed himself to me. âThen this man is a Spaniard?â âYes, Monsieur the Judge, so I have been told.â âDo you know anything more about him?â âI know he made purchases at my brotherâs pharmacy in the Rue Montorgueil.â âAt a pharmacy! and he bought, did he not, some chlorate of potash, azotite of potash, and sulphur powder; in a word, materials to manufacture explosives.â âI donât know what he bought. I only know that he did not pay, thatâs all.â âParbleau! Anarchists never payââ âI did not need to pay. I never bought chlorate of potash in the Rue Montorgueil,â cried the man; but the Judge exclaimed, louder still, âYes, it is your audacious habit of lying, but I will sift this matter to the bottom; sift it, do you understand. And now why is that muffler on in the month of May?â âI have a cold,â replied the other. âHavenât I the right to have a cold?â âThat is very suspicious, very suspicious. I am going to send for the druggist in the Rue Montorgueil!ââ
âThen they sent for your brother?â
âYes; I wanted to leave, tried to explain to the Judge that my wife was expecting me in Versailles, that I had already missed the five oâclock train, that I had company to dinner, and must bring home a pie. âYou shall not go,â replied the Judge, âand cease to annoy me with your dinner and your pie; I will need you for a second examination. The affair is of the gravest sort.â I tried to resist, but they led me away somewhat roughly, and thrust me again into the little apartment with the criminals. After waiting an hour I was brought
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