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"I am infinitely sorry, but--"
"But you refuse?"
"I certainly cannot comply with Monsieur's request."
The stranger, for all his bronzing, grew pale with rage.
"Do not compel me, Monsieur, to say what I must think of your conduct, if you persist in this determination," he said fiercely.
Muller smiled, but made no reply.
"You absolutely refuse to yield up the sketch?"
"Absolutely."
"Then, Monsieur, _c'est une infamie_--_et vous etes un lache_!"
But the last word had scarcely hissed past his lips before Muller dashed his coffee dregs full in the stranger's face.
In one second, the table was upset--blows were exchanged--Muller, pinned against the wall with his adversary's hands upon his throat, was striking out with the desperation of a man whose strength is overmatched--and the whole room was in a tumult.
In vain I attempted to fling myself between them. In vain the waiters rushed to and fro, imploring "ces Messieurs" to interpose. In vain a stout man pushed his way through the bystanders, exclaiming angrily:--
"Desist, Messieurs! Desist, in the name of the law! I am the proprietor of this establishment--I forbid this brawling--I will have you both arrested! Messieurs, do you hear?"
Suddenly the flush of rage faded out of Muller's face. He gasped--became livid. Lepany, Droz, myself, and one or two others, flew at the stranger and dragged him forcibly back.
"a.s.sa.s.sin!" I cried, "would you murder him?"
He flung us off, as a baited bull flings off a pack of curs. For myself, though I received only a backhanded blow on the chest, I staggered as if I had been struck with a sledgehammer.
Muller, half-fainting, dropped into a chair.
There was a tramp and clatter at the door--a swaying and parting of the crowd.
"Here are the sergents de ville!" cried a trembling waiter.
"He attacked me first," gasped Muller. "He has half strangled me."
"_Qu'est ce que ca me fait_!" shouted the enraged proprietor. "You are a couple of _canaille_! You have made a scandal in my Cafe. Sergents, arrest both these gentlemen!"
The police--there were two of them, with their big c.o.c.ked hats on their heads and their long sabres by their sides--pushed through the circle of spectators. The first laid his hand on Muller's shoulder; the second was about to lay his hand on mine, but I drew back.
"Which is the other?" said he, looking round.
"_Sacredie_!" stammered the proprietor, "he was here--there--not a moment ago!"
"_Diable_!" said the sergent de ville, stroking his moustache, and staring fiercely about him. "Did no one see him go?"
There was a chorus of exclamations--a rush to the inner salon--to the door--to the street. But the stranger was nowhere in sight; and, which was still more incomprehensible, no one had seen him go!
"_Mais, mon Dieu_!" exclaimed the proprietor, mopping his head and face violently with his pocket-handkerchief, "was the man a ghost, that he should vanish into the air?"
"_Parbleu_! a ghost with muscles of iron," said Muller. "Talk of the strength of a madman--he has the strength of a whole lunatic asylum!"
"He gave me a most confounded blow in the ribs, anyhow!" said Lepany.
"And nearly broke my arm," added Eugene Droz.
"And has given me a pain in my chest for a week," said I, in chorus.
"If he wasn't a ghost," observed the fat student sententiously, "he must certainly be the devil."
The sergents de ville grinned.
"Do we, then, arrest this gentleman?" asked the taller and bigger of the two, his hand still upon my friend's shoulder.
But Muller laughed and shook his head.
"What!" said he, "arrest a man for resisting the devil? Nonsense, _mes amis_, you ought to canonize me. What says Monsieur le proprietaire?"
Monsieur the proprietor smiled.
"I am willing to let the matter drop," he replied, "on the understanding that Monsieur Muller was not really the first offender."
"_Foi d'honneur_! He insulted me--I threw some coffee in his face--he flung himself upon me like a tiger, and almost choked me, as all here witnessed. And for what? Because I did him the honor to make a rough pencilling of his ugly face ... _Mille tonnerres_!--the fellow has stolen my sketch-book!"
CHAPTER x.x.xI.
FANCIES ABOUT FACES.
The sketch-book was undoubtedly gone, and the stranger had undoubtedly taken it. How he took it, and how he vanished, remained a mystery.
The aspect of affairs, meanwhile, was materially changed. Muller no longer stood in the position of a leniently-treated offender. He had become accuser, and plaintiff. A grave breach of the law had been committed, and he was the victim of a bold and skilful _tour de main_.
The police shook their heads, twirled their moustaches, and looked wise.
It was a case of premeditated a.s.sault--in short, of robbery with violence. It must be inquired into--reported, of course, at head-quarters, without loss of time. Would Monsieur be pleased to describe the stolen sketch-book? An oblong, green volume, secured by an elastic band; contains sketches in pencil and water-colors; value uncertain--Good. And the accused ... would Monsieur also be pleased to describe the person of the accused? His probable age, for instance; his height; the color of his hair, eyes, and beard? Good again. Lastly, Monsieur's own name and address, exactly and in full. _Tres-bon._ It might, perhaps, be necessary for Monsieur to enter a formal deposition to-morrow morning at the Prefecture of Police, in which case due notice would be given.
Whereupon he who seemed to be chief of the twain, having entered Muller's replies in a greasy pocket-book of stupendous dimensions, which he seemed to wear like a cuira.s.s under the breast of his uniform, proceeded to interrogate the proprietor and waiters.
Was the accused an habitual frequenter of the cafe?--No. Did they remember ever to have seen him there before?--No. Should they recognise him if they saw him again? To this question the answers were doubtful.
One waiter thought he should recognise the man; another was not sure; and Monsieur the proprietor admitted that he had himself been too angry to observe anything or anybody very minutely.
Finally, having made themselves of as much importance and asked as many questions as possible, the sergents de ville condescended to accept a couple of-pet.i.ts verres a-piece, and then, with much lifting of c.o.c.ked hats and clattering of sabres, departed.
Most of the students had ere this dropped off by twos and threes, and were gone to their day's work, or pleasure--to return again in equal force about five in the afternoon. Of those that remained, some five or six came up when the police were gone, and began chatting about the robbery. When they learned that Flandrin had desired to have a sketch of the man's head; when Muller described his features, and I his obstinate reserve and semi-military air, their excitement knew no bounds. Each had immediately his own conjecture to offer. He was a political spy, and therefore fearful lest his portrait should be recognised. He was a conspirator of the Fieschi school. He was Mazzini in person.