"Are all those persons to take part in the inquiry?" he said to the
king.
Louis XI. could not help smiling as he saw the
fright of the miser and
his sister.
"No, my old crony," he said; "don't worry yourself. They will sup at
Plessis, and you and I alone will make the
investigation. I am so good
in detecting criminals, that I will wager you ten thousand crowns I
shall do so now."
"Find him, sire, and make no wager."
They went at once into the strong room, where the Fleming kept his
treasure. There Louis, who asked to see, in the first place, the
casket from which the jewels of the Duke of Burgundy had been taken,
then the chimney down which the
robber was
supposed to have descended,
easily convinced his silversmith of the falsity of the latter
supposition,
inasmuch as there was no soot on the hearth,--where, in
truth, a fire was seldom made,--and no sign that any one had passed
down the flue; and
moreover that the chimney issued at a part of the
roof which was almost
inaccessible. At last, after two hours of close
investigation, marked with that
sagacity which
distinguished the
suspicious mind of Louis XI., it was clear to him, beyond all doubt,
that no one had forced an entrance into the strong-room of his
silversmith. No marks of
violence were on the locks, nor on the iron
coffers which contained the gold, silver, and jewels deposited as
securities by
wealthy debtors.
"If the
robber opened this box," said the king, why did he take
nothing out of it but the jewels of the Duke of Bavaria? What reason
had he for leaving that pearl
necklace which lay beside them? A queer
robber!"
At that remark the
unhappy miser turned pale: he and the king looked
at each other for a moment.
"Then, sire, what did that
robber whom you have taken under your
protection come to do here, and why did he prowl about at night?"
"If you have not guessed why, my crony, I order you to remain in
ignorance. That is one of my secrets."
"Then the devil is in my house!" cried the miser, piteously.
In any other circumstances the king would have laughed at his
silversmith's cry; but he had suddenly become
thoughtful, and was
casting on the Fleming those glances
peculiar to men of
talent and
power which seem to
penetrate the brain. Cornelius was
frightened,
thinking he had in some way offended his dangerous master.
"Devil or angel, I have him, the
guilty man!" cried Louis XI.
abruptly. "If you are robbed again to-night, I shall know to-morrow
who did it. Make that old hag you call your sister come here," he
added.
Cornelius almost hesitated to leave the king alone in the room with
his hoards; but the bitter smile on Louis's withered lips determined
him. Nevertheless he
hurried back, followed by the old woman.
"Have you any flour?" demanded the king.
"Oh yes; we have laid in our stock for the winter," she answered.
"Well, go and fetch some," said the king.
"What do you want to do with our flour, sire?" she cried, not the
least impressed by his royal majesty.
"Old fool!" said Cornelius, "go and
execute the orders of our gracious
master. Shall the king lack flour?"
"Our good flour!" she grumbled, as she went
downstairs. "Ah! my
flour!"
Then she returned, and said to the king:--
"Sire, is it only a royal notion to examine my flour?"
At last she reappeared,
bearing one of those stout linen bags which,
from time
immemorial, have been used in Touraine to carry or bring, to
and from market, nuts, fruits, or wheat. The bag was half full of
flour. The
housekeeper opened it and showed it to the king, on whom
she cast the rapid,
savage look with which old maids appear to squirt
venom upon men.
"It costs six sous the 'septeree,'" she said.
"What does that matter?" said the king. "Spread it on the floor; but
be careful to make an even layer of it--as if it had fallen like
snow."
The old maid did not
comprehend. This proposal astonished her as
though the end of the world had come.
"My flour, sire! on the ground! But--"
Maitre Cornelius, who was
beginning to understand, though
vaguely, the
intentions of the king, seized the bag and
gently poured its contents
on the floor. The old woman quivered, but she held out her hand for
the empty bag, and when her brother gave it back to her she
disappeared with a heavy sigh.
Cornelius then took a
feather broom and
gently smoothed the flour till
it looked like a fall of snow, retreating step by step as he did so,
followed by the king, who seemed much amused by the operation. When
they reached the door Louis XI. said to his silversmith, "Are there
two keys to the lock?"
"No, sire."
The king then examined the
structure of the door, which was braced
with large plates and bars of iron, all of which converged to a secret
lock, the key of which was kept by Cornelius.
After examining everything, the king sent for Tristan, and ordered him
to post several of his men for the night, and with the greatest
secrecy, in the
mulberry trees on the embankment and on the roofs of
the adjoining houses, and to
assemble at once the rest of his men and
escort him back to Plessis, so as to give the idea in the town that he
himself would not sup with Cornelius. Next, he told the miser to close
his windows with the
utmost care, that no single ray of light should
escape from the house, and then he
departed with much pomp for Plessis
along the embankment; but there he
secretly left his
escort, and
returned by a door in the ramparts to the house of the torconnier. All
these precautions were so well taken that the people of Tours really
thought the king had returned to Plessis, and would sup on the morrow
with Cornelius.
Towards eight o'clock that evening, as the king was supping with his
physician, Cornelius, and the captain of his guard, and
holding much
jovial
converse, forgetting for the time being that he was ill and in
danger of death, the deepest silence reigned without, and all passers,
even the wariest
robber, would have believed that the Malemaison was
occupied as usual.
"I hope," said the king, laughing, "that my silversmith shall be
robbed to-night, so that my
curiosity may be satisfied. Therefore,
messieurs, no one is to leave his
chamber to-morrow morning without my
order, under pain of
grievous punishment."
Thereupon, all went to bed. The next morning, Louis XI. was the first
to leave his
apartment, and he went at once to the door of the strong-
room. He was not a little astonished to see, as he went along, the
marks of a large foot along the stairways and corridors of the house.
Carefully avoiding those precious footprints, he followed them to the
door of the treasure-room, which he found locked without a sign of
fracture or defacement. Then he
studied the direction of the steps;
but as they grew gradually fainter, they finally left not the
slightest trace, and it was impossible for him to discover where the
robber had fled.
"Ho, crony!" called out the king, "you have been
finely robbed this
time."
At these words the old Fleming
hurried out of his
chamber, visibly
terrified. Louis XI. made him look at the foot-prints on the stairs
and corridors, and while examining them himself for the second time,
the king chanced to observe the miser's slippers and recognized the
type of sole that was printed in flour on the corridors. He said not a
word, and checked his
laughter, remembering the
innocent men who had
been hanged for the crime. The miser now
hurried to his treasure. Once