The Mystery of Orcival eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 394 pages of information about The Mystery of Orcival.

The Mystery of Orcival eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 394 pages of information about The Mystery of Orcival.

But the intensity of his mourning diminished, and the ills of idleness came.  The justiceship of the peace at Orcival was vacant, and M. Plantat applied for and obtained it.  Once installed in this office, he suffered less from ennui.  This man, who saw his life drawing to an end, undertook to interest himself in the thousand diverse cases which came before him.  He applied to these all the forces of a superior intelligence, the resources of a mind admirably fitted to separate the false from the true among the lies he was forced to hear.  He persisted, besides, in living alone, despite the urging of M. Courtois; pretending that society fatigued him, and that an unhappy man is a bore in company.

Misfortune, which modifies characters, for good or bad, had made him, apparently, a great egotist.  He declared that he was only interested in the affairs of life as a critic tired of its active scenes.  He loved to make a parade of his profound indifference for everything, swearing that a rain of fire descending upon Paris, would not even make him turn his head.  To move him seemed impossible.  “What’s that to me?” was his invariable exclamation.

Such was the man who, a quarter of an hour after Baptiste’s departure, entered the mayor’s house.

M. Plantat was tall, thin, and nervous.  His physiognomy was not striking.  His hair was short, his restless eyes seemed always to be seeking something, his very long nose was narrow and sharp.  After his affliction, his mouth, formerly well shaped, became deformed; his lower lip had sunk, and gave him a deceptive look of simplicity.

“They tell me,” said he, at the threshold, “that Madame de Tremorel has been murdered.”

“These men here, at least, pretend so,” answered the mayor, who had just reappeared.

M. Courtois was no longer the same man.  He had had time to make his toilet a little.  His face attempted to express a haughty coldness.  He had been reproaching himself for having been wanting in dignity, in showing his grief before the Bertauds.  “Nothing ought to agitate a man in my position,” said he to himself.  And, being terribly agitated, he forced himself to be calm, cold, and impassible.

M. Plantat was so naturally.

“This is a very sad event,” said he, in a tone which he forced himself to make perfectly disinterested; “but after all, how does it concern us?  We must, however, hurry and ascertain whether it is true.  I have sent for the brigadier, and he will join us.”

“Let us go,” said M. Courtois; “I have my scarf in my pocket.”

They hastened off.  Philippe and his father went first, the young man eager and impatient, the old one sombre and thoughtful.  The mayor, at each step, made some exclamation.

“I can’t understand it,” muttered he; “a murder in my commune! a commune where, in the memory of men, no crime has been committed!”

And be directed a suspicious glance toward the two Bertauds.  The road which led toward the chateau of M. de Tremorel was an unpleasant one, shut in by walls a dozen feet high.  On one side is the park of the Marchioness de Lanascol; on the other the spacious garden of Saint Jouan.  The going and coming had taken time; it was nearly eight o’clock when the mayor, the justice, and their guides stopped before the gate of M. de Tremorel.

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The Mystery of Orcival from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.