Part 7 (2/2)

There was nothing to be got out of him. Besides, it was only a short drive.

They entered Neuilly through the Porte des Sablons and, two minutes later, stopped before a long, narrow pa.s.sage between high walls which led them to a small, one-storeyed house.

Gaston Dutreuil rang.

”Madame is in the drawing-room, with her mother,” said the maid who opened the door.

”I'll go in to the ladies,” he said, taking Renine and Hortense with him.

It was a fair-sized, prettily-furnished room, which, in ordinary times, must have been used also as a study. Two women sat weeping, one of whom, elderly and grey-haired, came up to Gaston Dutreuil. He explained the reason for Renine's presence and she at once cried, amid her sobs:

”My daughter's husband is innocent, sir. Jacques? A better man never lived.

He was so good-hearted! Murder his cousin? But he wors.h.i.+pped his cousin! I swear that he's not guilty, sir! And they are going to commit the infamy of putting him to death? Oh, sir, it will kill my daughter!”

Renine realized that all these people had been living for months under the obsession of that innocence and in the certainty that an innocent man could never be executed. The news of the execution, which was now inevitable, was driving them mad.

He went up to a poor creature bent in two whose face, a quite young face, framed in pretty, flaxen hair, was convulsed with desperate grief.

Hortense, who had already taken a seat beside her, gently drew her head against her shoulder. Renine said to her:

”Madame, I do not know what I can do for you. But I give you my word of honour that, if any one in this world can be of use to you, it is myself.

I therefore implore you to answer my questions as though the clear and definite wording of your replies were able to alter the aspect of things and as though you wished to make me share your opinion of Jacques Aubrieux.

For he is innocent, is he not?”

”Oh, sir, indeed he is!” she exclaimed; and the woman's whole soul was in the words.

”You are certain of it. But you were unable to communicate your certainty to the court. Well, you must now compel me to share it. I am not asking you to go into details and to live again through the hideous torment which you have suffered, but merely to answer certain questions. Will you do this?”

”I will.”

Renine's influence over her was complete. With a few sentences Renine had succeeded in subduing her and inspiring her with the will to obey. And once more Hortense realized all the man's power, authority and persuasion.

”What was your husband?” he asked, after begging the mother and Gaston Dutreuil to preserve absolute silence.

”An insurance-broker.”

”Lucky in business?”

”Until last year, yes.”

”So there have been financial difficulties during the past few months?”

”Yes.”

”And the murder was committed when?”

”Last March, on a Sunday.”

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