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During these stormy nights Bidault-Coquille at the top of his old
steam-engine, under the serene sky, boasted in his heart, while the shooting
stars registered themselves upon his photographic plates. He was fighting for
justice. He loved and was loved with a sublime passion. Insult and calumny
raised him to the clouds. A caricature of him in company with those of
Colomban, Kerdanic, and Colonel Hastaing was to be seen in the newspaper
kiosks. The Anti-Pyrotists proclaimed that he had received fifty thousand
francs from the big Jewish financiers. The reporters of the militarist sheets
held interviews regarding his scientific knowledge with official scholars, who
declared he had no knowledge of the stars, disputed his most solid observations,
denied his most certain discoveries, and condemned his most ingenious and most
fruitful hypotheses. He exulted under these flattering blows of hatred and
envy.
He contemplated the black immensity pierced by a multitude of lights,
without giving a thought to all the heavy slumbers, cruel insomnias, vain
dreams, spoilt pleasures, and infinitely diverse miseries that a great city
contains.
"It is in this enormous city," said he to himself, "that the
just and the unjust are joining battle."
And substituting a simple and magnificent poetry for the multiple and vulgar
reality, he represented to himself the Pyrot affair as a struggle between good
and bad angels. He awaited the eternal triumph of the Sons of Light and
congratulated himself on being a Child of the Day confounding the Children of
Night.
X. MR. JUSTICE CHAUSSEPIED
Hitherto blinded by fear, incautious and stupid before the bands of Friar
Douillard and the partisans of Prince Crucho, the Republicans at last opened
their eyes and grasped the real meaning of the Pyrot affair. The deputies who
had for two years turned pale at the shouts of the patriotic crowds became, not
indeed more courageous, but altered their cowardice and blamed Robin Mielleux
for disorders which their own compliance had encouraged, and the instigators of
which they had several times slavishly congratulated. They reproached him for
having imperilled the Republic by a weakness which was really theirs and a
timidity which they themselves had imposed upon him. Some of them began to doubt
whether it was not to their interest to believe in Pyrot's innocence rather
than in his guilt, and thenceforward they felt a bitter anguish at the thought
that the unhappy man might have been wrongly convicted and that in his aerial
cage he might be expiating another man's crimes. "I cannot sleep on
account of it!" was what several members of Minister Guillaumette's
majority used to say. But these were ambitious to replace their chief.
These generous legislators overthrew the cabinet, and the President of the
Republic put in Robin Mielleux's place, a patriarchal Republican with a flowing
beard, La Trinite by name, who, like most of the Penguins, understood nothing
about the affair, but thought that too many monks were mixed up in it.
General Greatauk before leaving the Ministry of War, gave his final advice
to Pariler, the Chief of the Staff.
"I go and you remain," said he, as he shook hands with him.
"The Pyrot affair is my daughter; I confide her to you, she is worthy of
your love and your care; she is beautiful. Do not forget that her beauty loves
the shade, is leased with mystery, and likes to remain veiled. Great her
modesty with gentleness. Too many indiscreet looks have already profaned her
charms. . . . Panther, you desired proofs and you obtained them. You have many,
perhaps too many, in your possession. I see that there will be many tiresome
interventions and much dangerous curiosity. If I were in your place I would
tear up all those documents. Believe me, the best of proofs is none at all. That
is the only one which nobody discusses."
Alas! General Panther did not realise the wisdom of this advice. The future
was only too thoroughly to justify Greatauk's perspicacity. La Trinite demanded
the documents belonging, to the Pyrot affair. Peniche, his Minister of War,
refused them in the superior interests of the national defence, telling him
that the documents under General Panther's care formed the hugest mass of
archives in the world. La Trinite studied the case as well as he could, and,
without penetrating to the bottom of the matter, suspected it of irregularity.
Conformably to his rights and prerogatives he then ordered a fresh trial to be
held. Immediately, Peniche, his Minister of War, accused him of insulting the
army and betraying the country and flung his portfolio at his head. He was
replaced by a second, who did the same. To him succeeded a third, who imitated
these examples, and those after him to the number of seventy acted like their
predecessors, until the venerable La Trinite groaned beneathe the weight of
bellicose portfolios. The seventy-first Minister of War, van Julep, retained
office. Not that he was in disagreement with so many and such noble colleagues,
but he had been commissioned by them generously to betray his Prime Minister,
to cover him with shame and opprobrium, and to convert the new trial to the
glory of Greatauk, the satisfaction of the Anti-Pyrotists, the profit of the
monks, and the restoration of Prince Crucho.
General van Julep, though endowed with high military virtues, was not
intelligent enough to employ the subtle conduct and exquisite methods of
Greatauk. He thought, like General Panther, that tangible proofs against Pyrot
were necessary, that they could never ave too many of them, that they could
never have even enough. He expressed these' sentiments to his Chief of Staff,
who was only too inclined to agree with them.
"Panther," said he, "we are at the moment when we need
abundant and superabundant proofs."
"You have said enough, General," answered Panther, "I will
complete my piles of documents."
Six months later the proofs against Pyrot filled two storeys of the Ministry
of War. The ceiling fell in beneath the weight of the bundles, and the
avalanche of falling documents crushed two head clerks, fourteen second clerks,
and sixty copying clerks, who were at work upon the ground floor arranging a
change in the fashion of the cavalry gaiters. The walls of the huge edifice had
to be propped. Passers-by saw with amazement enormous beams and monstrous
stanchions which reared themselves obliquely against the noble front of the
building, now tottering and disjointed, and blocked up the streets, stopped the
carriages, and presented to the motor-omnibuses an obstacle against which they
dashed with their loads of passengers.
The judges who had condemned Pyrot were not, properly speaking, judges but
soldiers. The judges who had condemned Colomban were real judges, but of
inferior rank, wearing seedy black clothes like church vergers, unlucky
wretches of judges, miserable judgelings. Above them were the superior judges
who wore ermine robes over their black gowns. These, renowned for their
knowledge and doctrine, formed a court whose terrible name expressed power. It
was called the Court of Appeal (Cassation) so as to make it clear that it was
the hammer suspended over the judgments and decrees of all other jurisdictions.
One of these superior red Judges of the Supreme Court, called Chaussepied,
led a modest and tranquil life in a suburb of Alca. His soul was pure, his heart
honest, his spirit just. When he had finished studying his documents he used to
play the violin and cultivate hyacinths. Every Sunday he dined with his
neighbours the Mesdemoiselles Helbivore. His old age was cheerful and robust
and his friends often praised the amenity of his character.
For some months, however, he had been irritable and touchy, and when he
opened a newspaper his broad and ruddy face would become covered with dolorous
wrinkles and darkened with an angry purple. Pyrot was the cause of it. Justice
Chaussepied could not understand how an officer could have committed so black a
crime as to hand over eighty thousand trusses of military hay to a neighbouring
and hostile Power. And he could still less conceive how a scoundrel should have
found official defenders in Penguinia. The thought that there existed in his
country a Pyrot, a Colonel Hastaing, a Colomban, a Kerdanic, a Phoenix, spoilt
his hyacinths,his violin, his heaven, and his earth, all nature, and even his
dinner with the Mesdemoiselles Helbivore!
In the mean time the Pyrot case, having been presented to the Supreme Court
by the Keeper of Seals, it fell to Chaussepied to examine it and cover its
defects, in case any existed. Although as upright and honest as a man can be,
and trained by long habit to exercise his magistracy without fear or favour, he
expected to find in the documents he submitted to him proofs of certain guilt
and obvious criminality. After lengthened difficulties and repeated refusals on
the part of General Julep, Justice Chaussepied was allowed to examine the
documents. Numbered and initialed they ran to the number of fourteen millions
six hundred and twenty-six thousand three hundred and twelve. As he studied
them the judge was at first surprised, then astonished, then stupefied, amazed,
and, if I dare say so, flabbergasted. He found among the documents prospectuses
of new fancy shops, newspapers, fashion-plates, paper bags, old business
letters, exercise books, brown paper, green paper for rubbing parquet floors, playing
cards, diagrams, six thousand copies of the "Key to Dreams," but not
a single document in which any mention was made of Pyrot.
XI. CONCLUSION
The appeal was allowed, and Pyrot was brought down from his cage. But the Anti-Pyrotists
did not regard themselves as beaten. The military judges re-tried Pyrot.
Greatauk, in this second affair, surpassed himself. He obtained a second
conviction; he obtained it by declaring that the proofs communicated to the
Supreme Court were worth nothing, and that great care had been taken to keep
back the good ones, since they ought to remain secret. In the opinion of
connoisseurs he had never shown so much address. On leaving the court, as he
passed through the vestibule with a tranquil step, and his hands behind his
back, amidst a crowd of sight-seers, a woman dressed in red and with her face
covered by a black veil rushed at him, brandishing a kitchen knife.
"Die, scoundrel!" she cried. It was Maniflore. Before those
present could understand what was happening, the general seized her by the
wrist, and with apparent gentleness, squeezed it so forcibly that the knife
fell from her aching hand.
Then he picked it up and handed it to Maniflore.
"Madam," said he with a bow, "you have dropped a household
utensil."
He could not prevent the heroine from being taken to the police-station; but
he had her immediately released and afterwards he employed all his influence to
stop the prosecution.
The second conviction of Pyrot was Greatauk's last victory.
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