The Widow Lerouge eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about The Widow Lerouge.

The Widow Lerouge eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about The Widow Lerouge.

Each one of the little doors, which has its number painted over it in black, opens into the office of a judge of inquiry.  All the rooms are just alike:  if you see one, you have seen them all.  They have nothing terrible nor sad in themselves; and yet it is difficult to enter one of them without a shudder.  They are cold.  The walls all seem moist with the tears which have been shed there.  You shudder, at thinking of the avowals wrested from the criminals, of the confessions broken with sobs murmured there.

In the office of the judge of inquiry, Justice clothes herself in none of that apparel which she afterwards dons in order to strike fear into the masses.  She is still simple, and almost disposed to kindness.  She says to the prisoner,—­

“I have strong reasons for thinking you guilty; but prove to me your innocence, and I will release you.”

On entering one of these rooms, a stranger would imagine that he got into a cheap shop by mistake.  The furniture is of the most primitive sort, as is the case in all places where important matters are transacted.  Of what consequence are surroundings to the judge hunting down the author of a crime, or to the accused who is defending his life?

A desk full of documents for the judge, a table for the clerk, an arm-chair, and one or two chairs besides comprise the entire furniture of the antechamber of the court of assize.  The walls are hung with green paper; the curtains are green, and the floors are carpeted in the same color.  Monsieur Daburon’s office bore the number fifteen.

M. Daburon had arrived at his office in the Palais de Justice at nine o’clock in the morning, and was waiting.  His course resolved upon, he had not lost an instant, understanding as well as old Tabaret the necessity for rapid action.  He had already had an interview with the public prosecutor, and had arranged everything with the police.

Besides issuing the warrant against Albert, he had summoned the Count de Commarin, Madame Gerdy, Noel, and some of Albert’s servants, to appear before him with as little delay as possible.

He thought it essential to question all these persons before examining the prisoner.  Several detectives had started off to execute his orders, and he himself sat in his office, like a general commanding an army, who sends off his aide-de-camp to begin the battle, and who hopes that victory will crown his combinations.

Often, at this same hour, he had sat in this office, under circumstances almost identical.  A crime had been committed, and, believing he had discovered the criminal, he had given orders for his arrest.  Was not that his duty?  But he had never before experienced the anxiety of mind which disturbed him now.  Many a time had he issued warrants of arrest, without possessing even half the proofs which guided him in the present case.  He kept repeating this to himself; and yet he could not quiet his dreadful anxiety, which would not allow him a moment’s rest.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Widow Lerouge from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.