an historical mystery-第34节
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〃Everything can be arranged;〃 he said; drawing the Marquis de Simeuse
into a corner of the dining…room。 〃Perhaps after all it is nothing but
a joke; you've been a soldier and soldiers understand each other。 Tell
me; what have you really done with the senator? If you have killed him
why; that's the end of it! But if you have only locked him up;
release him; for you see for yourself your game is balked。 Do this and
I am certain the director of the jury and the senator himself will
drop the matter。〃
〃We know absolutely nothing about it;〃 said the marquis。
〃If you take that tone the matter is likely to go far;〃 replied the
lieutenant。
〃Dear cousin;〃 said the Marquis de Simeuse; 〃we are forced to go to
prison; but do not be uneasy; we shall return in a few hours; for
there is some misunderstanding in all this which can be explained。〃
〃I hope so; for your sakes; gentlemen;〃 said the magistrate; signing
to the gendarmes to remove the four gentlemen; Michu; and Gothard。
〃Don't take them to Troyes; keep them in your guardhouse at Arcis;〃 he
said to the lieutenant; 〃they must be present to…morrow; at daybreak;
when we compare the shoes of their horses with the hoof…prints in the
park。〃
Lechesneau and Pigoult did not follow until they had closely
questioned Catherine; Monsieur and Madame d'Hauteserre; and Laurence。
The Durieus; Catherine; and Marthe declared they had only seen their
masters at breakfast…time; Monsieur d'Hauteserre said he had seen them
at three o'clock。
When; at midnight; Laurence found herself alone with Monsieur and
Madame d'Hauteserre; the abbe and his sister; and without the four
young men who for the last eighteen months had been the life of the
chateau and the love and joy of her own life; she fell into a gloomy
silence which no one present dared to break。 No affliction was ever
deeper or more complete than hers。 At last a deep sigh broke the
stillness; and all eyes turned towards the sound。
Marthe; forgotten in a corner; rose; exclaiming; 〃Death! They will
kill them in spite of their innocence!〃
〃Mademoiselle; what is the matter with you?〃 said the abbe。
Laurence left the room without replying。 She needed solitude to
recover strength in presence of this terrible unforeseen disaster。
CHAPTER XV
DOUBTS AND FEARS OF COUNSEL
At a distance of thirty…four years; during which three great
revolutions have taken place; none but elderly persons can recall the
immense excitement produced in Europe by the abduction of a senator of
the French Empire。 No trial; if we except that of Trumeaux; the grocer
of the Place Saint…Michel; and that of the widow Morin; under the
Empire; those of Fualdes and de Castaing; under the Restoration; those
of Madame Lafarge and Fieschi; under the present government; ever
roused so much curiosity or so deep an interest as that of the four
young men accused of abducting Malin。 Such an attack against a member
of his Senate excited the wrath of the Emperor; who was told of the
arrest of the delinquents almost at the moment when he first heard of
the crime and the negative results of the inquiries。 The forest;
searched throughout; the department of the Aube; ransacked from end to
end; gave not the slightest indication of the passage of the Comte de
Gondreville nor of his imprisonment。 Napoleon sent for the chief
justice; who; after obtaining certain information from the ministry of
police; explained to his Majesty the position of Malin in regard to
the Simeuse brothers and the Gondreville estate。 The Emperor; at that
time pre…occupied with serious matters; considered the affair
explained by these anterior facts。
〃Those young men are fools;〃 he said。 〃A lawyer like Malin will escape
any deed they may force him to sign under violence。 Watch those
nobles; and discover the means they take to set the Comte de
Gondreville at liberty。〃
He ordered the affair to be conducted with the utmost celerity;
regarding it as an attack on his own institutions; a fatal example of
resistance to the results of the Revolution; an effort to open the
great question of the sales of 〃national property;〃 and a hindrance to
that fusion of parties which was the constant object of his home
policy。 Besides all this; he thought himself tricked by these young
nobles; who had given him their promise to live peaceably。
〃Fouche's prediction has come true;〃 he cried; remembering the words
uttered two years earlier by his present minister of police; who said
them under the impressions conveyed to him by Corentin's report as to
the character and designs of Mademoiselle de Cinq…Cygne。
It is impossible for persons living under a constitutional government;
where no one really cares for that cold and thankless; blind; deaf
Thing called public interest; to imagine the zeal which a mere word of
the Emperor was able to inspire in his political or administrative
machine。 That powerful will seemed to impress itself as much upon
things as upon men。 His decision once uttered; the Emperor; overtaken
by the coalition of 1806; forgot the whole matter。 He thought only of
new battles to fight; and his mind was occupied in massing his
regiments to strike the great blow at the heart of the Prussian
monarchy。 His desire for prompt justice in the present case found
powerful assistance in the great uncertainty which affected the
position of all magistrates of the Empire。 Just at this time
Cambaceres; as arch…chancellor; and Regnier; chief justice; were
preparing to organize /tribunaux de premiere instance/ (lower civil
courts); imperial courts; and a court of appeal or supreme court。 They
were agitating the question of a legal garb or costume; to which
Napoleon attached; and very justly; so much importance in all official
stations; and they were also inquiring into the character of the
persons composing the magistracy。 Naturally; therefore; the officials
of the department of the Aube considered they could have no better
recommendation than to give proofs of their zeal in the matter of the
abduction of the Comte de Gondreville。 Napoleon's suppositions became
certainties to these courtiers and also to the populace。
Peace still reigned on the continent; admiration for the Emperor was
unanimous in France; he cajoled all interests; persons; vanities; and
things; in short; everything; even memories。 This attack; therefore;
directed against his senator; seemed in the eyes of all an assault
upon the public welfare。 The luckless and innocent gentlemen were the
objects of general opprobrium。 A few nobles living quietly on their
estates deplored the affair among themselves but dared not open their
lips; in fact; how was it possible for them to oppose the current of
public opinion。 Throughout the department the deaths of the eleven
persons killed by the Simeuse brothers in 1792 from the windows of the
hotel Cinq…Cygne were brought up against them。 It was feared that
other returned and now emboldened /emigres/ might follow this example
of violence against those who had bought their estates from the
〃national domain;〃 as a method of protesting against what they might
call an unjust spoliation。
The unfortunate young nobles were therefore considered as robbers;
brigands; murderers; and their connection with Michu was particularly
fatal to them。 Michu; who was declared; either he or his father…in…
law; to have cut off all the heads that fell under the Terror in that
department; was made the subject of ridiculous tales。 The exasperation
of the public mind was all the more intense because nearly all the
functionaries of the department owed their offices to Malin。 No
generous voice uplifted itself against the verdict of the public。
Besides all this; the accused had no legal means with which to combat
prejudice; for the Code of Brumaire; year IV。; giving as it did both
the prosecution of a charge and the verdict upon it into the hands of
a jury; deprived the accused of the vast protection of an appeal
against legal suspicion。
The day after the arrest all the inhabitants of the chateau of Cinq…
Cygne; both masters and servants; were summoned to appear before the
prosecuting jury。 Cinq…Cygne was left in charge of a farmer; under the
supervision of the abbe and his sister who moved into it。 Mademoiselle
de Cinq…Cygne; with Monsieur and Madame d'Hauteserre; went to Troyes
and occupied a small house belonging to Durieu in one of the long and
wide faubourgs which lead from the little town。 Laurence's heart was
wrung when she at last comprehended the temper of the populace; the
malignity of the bourgeoisie; and the hostility of the administration;
from the many little events which happened to them as relatives of
prisoners accused of criminal wrong…doing and about to be judged in a
provincial town。 Instead of hearing encouraging or compassionate words
they heard only speeches which called for vengeance; proofs of hatred
surrounded them in place of the strict politeness or the reserve
required by mere decency; but above all they were conscious of an
isolation which every mind must feel; but more particularly those
which are made distrustful by misfortune。
Laurence; who had recovered her vigor of mind; relied upon the