Within an Inch of His Life (Murder Mystery). Emile Gaboriau

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Within an Inch of His Life (Murder Mystery) - Emile Gaboriau

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      In the night from the 22nd to the 23rd of June, 1871, towards one o’clock in the morning, the Paris suburb of Sauveterre, the principal and most densely populated suburb of that pretty town, was startled by the 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 rode bareback, 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 last before the fine house which stands at the corner of Castle Street.

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

      Having alighted, the peasant seized the bell-knob, and began to ring so furiously, 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 his hand, troubled, and unable to disguise his trouble, he had just come down into the hall, and heard all that was said.

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

      Pushing the servant aside, the peasant came up to him, and said, making not 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 to do; “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 the whole town; and to do this in the middle of the night was nothing less than to frighten the poor people of Sauveterre, who had heard the drums beating the alarm but too often during the war with the Germans, and then again during the reign of the Commune. Therefore M. Seneschal asked,—

      “Is it a serious fire?”

      “Serious!” exclaimed the peasant. “How could it be otherwise with such a wind 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 his window, “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 having made two or three miles at double-quick, they found what? A wretched heap 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 there was no reason for it, that, even when the wolf really was there, the townspeople 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 long whip.

      “Must I tell you again and again,” he said, “that every thing is on fire,—barns, outhouses, haystacks, the houses, the old castle, and every thing? If you wait much longer, you won’t find one stone upon another 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, the drummer, you know, and tell him from me to beat the alarm instantly all over town. Then you run to Capt. Parenteau’s, and explain to him what you have heard. Ask him to get the keys of the engine-house.—Wait!—when you have done that, come back and put the horse in.—Fire at Valpinson! I shall go with the engine. Go, run, knock at every door, cry, ‘Fire! Fire!’ Tell everybody to come to the New-Market Square.”

      When the servant had run off as fast as he could, the mayor turned to the 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 help them.”

      But the peasant did not move.

      “Before going back to Valpinson,” he said, “I have another commission to attend 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 barn that 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

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