M. Floçon, the Chief, was an early man, and he paid a first
visit to his office about 7 A.M.
He lived just round the corner in the Rue des Arcs, and had not
far to go to the Prefecture. But even now, soon after daylight, he
was correctly dressed, as became a responsible ministerial officer.
He wore a tight frock coat and an immaculate white tie; under his
arm he carried the regulation portfolio, or lawyer’s bag, stuffed
full of reports, dispositions, and documents dealing with cases in
hand. He was altogether a very precise and natty little personage,
quiet and unpretending in demeanour, with a mild, thoughtful face
in which two small ferrety eyes blinked and twinkled behind
gold-rimmed glasses. But when things went wrong, when he had to
deal with fools, or when scent was keen, or the enemy near, he
would become as fierce and eager as any terrier.
He had just taken his place at his table and begun to arrange
his papers, which, being a man of method, he kept carefully sorted
by lots each in an old copy of theFigaro, when he was
called to the telephone. His services were greatly needed, as we
know, at the Lyons station and the summons was to the following
effect:
“Crime on train No. 45. A man murdered in the sleeper. All the
passengers held. Please come at once. Most important.”
A fiacre was called instantly, and M. Floçon, accompanied by
Galipaud and Block, the two first inspectors for duty, was driven
with all possible speed across Paris.
He was met outside the station, just under the wide verandah, by
the officials, who gave him a brief outline of the facts, so far as
they were known, and as they have already been put before the
reader.
“The passengers have been detained?” asked M. Floçon at
once.
“Those in the sleeping-car only— ”
“Tut, tut! they should have been all kept— at least until you
had taken their names and addresses. Who knows what they might not
have been able to tell?”
It was suggested that as the crime was committed presumably
while the train was in motion, only those in the one car could be
implicated.
“We should never jump to conclusions,” said the Chief
snappishly. “Well, show me the train card— the list of the
travellers in the sleeper.”
“It cannot be found, sir.”
“Impossible! Why, it is the porter’s business to deliver it at
the end of the journey to his superiors, and under the law— to us.
Where is the porter? In custody?”
“Surely, sir, but there is something wrong with him.”
“So I should think! Nothing of this kind could well occur
without his knowledge. If he was doing his duty— unless, of course,
he— but let us avoid hasty conjectures.”
“He has also lost the passengers’ tickets, which you know he
retains till the end of the journey. After the catastrophe,
however, he was unable to lay his hand upon his pocket-book. It
contained all his papers.”
“Worse and worse. There is something behind all this. Take me to
him. Stay, can I have a private room close to the other— where the
prisoners, those held on suspicion, are? It will be necessary to
hold investigations, take their depositions. M. lé Juge will be
here directly.”
M. Floçon was soon installed in a room actually communicating
with the waiting-room, and as a preliminary of the first
importance, taking precedence even of the examination of the
sleeping-car, he ordered the porter to be brought in to answer
certain questions.
The man, Ludwig Groote, as he presently gave his name,
thirty-two years of age, born at Amsterdam, looked such a sluggish,
slouching, blear-eyed creature that M. Floçon began by a sharp
rebuke.
“Now. Sharp! Are you always like this?” cried the Chief.
The porter still stared straight before him with lack-lustre
eyes, and made no immediate reply.
“Are you drunk? are you— Can it be possible?” he said, and in
vague reply to a sudden strong suspicion, he went on:
“What were you doing between Laroche and Paris? Sleeping?”
The man roused himself a little. “I think I slept. I must have
slept. I was very drowsy. I had been up two nights; but so it is
always, and I am not like this generally. I do not understand.”
“Hah!” The Chief thought he understood. “Did you feel this
drowsiness before leaving Laroche?”
“No, monsieur, I did not. Certainly not. I was fresh till then—
quite fresh.”
“Hum; exactly; I see;” and the little Chief jumped to his feet
and ran round to where the porter stood sheepishly, and sniffed and
smelt at him.
“Yes, yes.” Sniff, sniff, sniff, the little man danced round and
round him, then took hold of the porter’s head with one hand, and
with the other turned down his lower eyelid so as to expose the
eyeball, sniffed a little more, and then resumed his seat.
“Exactly. And now, where is your train card?”
“Pardon, monsieur, I cannot find it.”
“That is absurd. Where do you keep it? Look again— search— I
must have it.”
The porter shook his head hopelessly.
“It is gone, monsieur, and my pocket-book.”
“But your papers, the tickets— ”
“Everything was in it, monsieur. I must have dropped it.”
Strange, very strange. However— the fact was to be recorded, for
the moment. He could of course return to it.
“You can give me the names of the passengers?”
“No, monsieur. Not exactly. I cannot remember, not enough to
distinguish between them.”
“Fichtre! But this is most devilishly irritating. To
think that I have to do with a man so stupid— such an idiot, such
an ass!”
“At least you know how the berths were occupied, how many in
each, and which persons? Yes? You can tell me that? Well, go on. By
and by we will have the passengers in, and you can fix their
places, after I have ascertained their names. Now, please! For how
many was the car?”
“Sixteen. There were two compartments of four berths each, and
four of two berths each.”
“Stay, let us make a plan. I will draw it. Here, now, is that
right?” and the Chief held up the rough diagram, here shown—
[Illustration: Diagram of railroad car.]
“Here we have the six compartments. Now take a,
with berths 1, 2, 3, and 4. Were they all occupied?”
“No; only two, by Englishmen. I know that they talked English,
which I understand a little. One was a soldier; the other, I think,
a clergyman, or priest.”
“Good! we can verify that directly. Now, b, with
berths 5 and 6. Who was there?”
“One gentleman. I don’t remember his name. But I shall know him
by appearance.”
“Go on. In c, two berths, 7 and 8?”
“Also one gentleman. It was he who— I mean, that is where the
crime occurred.”
“Ah, indeed, in 7 and 8? Very well. And the next, 9 and 10?”
“A lady. Our only lady. She came from Rome.”
“One moment. Where did the rest come from? Did any embark on the
road?”
“No, monsieur; all the passengers travelled through from
Rome.”
“The dead man included? Was he Roman?”
“That I cannot say, but he came on board at Rome.”
“Very well. This lady— she was alone?”
“In the compartment, yes. But not altogether.”
“I do not understand!”
“She had her servant with her.”
“In the car?”
“No, not in the car. As a passenger by second class. But she
came to her mistress sometimes, in the car.”
“For her service, I presume?”
“Well, yes, monsieur, when I would permit it. But she came a
little too often, and I was compelled to protest, to speak to
Madame la Comtesse— ”
“She was a countess, then?”
“The maid addressed her by that title. That is all I know. I
heard her.”
“When did you see the lady’s maid last?”
“Last night. I think at Amberieux. about 8 p.m.”
“Not this morning?”
“No, sir, I am quite sure of that.”
“Not at Laroche? She did not come on board to stay, for the last
stage, when her mistress would be getting up, dressing, and likely
to require her?”
“No; I should not have permitted it.”
“And where is the maid now, d’you suppose?”
The porter looked at him with an air of complete imbecility.
“She is surely somewhere near, in or about the station. She
would hardly desert her mistress now,” he said, stupidly, at
last.
“At any rate we can soon settle that.” The Chief turned to one
of his assistants, both of whom had been standing behind him all
the time, and said:
“Step out, Galipaud, and see. No, wait. I am nearly as stupid as
this simpleton. Describe this maid.”
“Tall and slight, dark-eyed, very black hair. Dressed all in
black, plain black bonnet. I cannot remember more.”
“Find her, Galipaud— keep your eye on her. We may want her— why,
I cannot say, as she seems disconnected with the event, but still
she ought to be at hand.” Then, turning to the porter, he went on.
“Finish, please. You said 9 and 10 was the lady’s. Well, 11 and
12?”
“It was vacant all through the run.”
“And the last compartment, for four?”
“There were two berths, occupied both by Frenchmen, at least so
I judged them. They talked French to each other and to me.”
“Then now we have them all. Stand aside, please, and I will make
the passengers come in. We will then determine their places and
affix their names from their own admissions. Call them in, Block,
one by one.”