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tilion’ was flung from the Charlemagne yard into the Lions’
Ditch, over the five-story building which separated the two
court-yards.
What prisoners call a ‘postilion’ is a pallet of bread ar-
tistically moulded, which is sent into Ireland, that is to say,
over the roofs of a prison, from one courtyard to another.
Etymology: over England; from one land to another; into
Ireland. This little pellet falls in the yard. The man who
picks it up opens it and finds in it a note addressed to some
prisoner in that yard. If it is a prisoner who finds the trea-
sure, he forwards the note to its destination; if it is a keeper,
or one of the prisoners secretly sold who are called sheep in
prisons and foxes in the galleys, the note is taken to the of-
fice and handed over to the police.
On this occasion, the postilion reached its address, al-
though the person to whom it was addressed was, at that
moment, in solitary confinement. This person was no other
than Babet, one of the four heads of Patron Minette.
The postilion contained a roll of paper on which only
these two lines were written:—
‘Babet. There is an affair in the Rue Plumet. A gate on a
ga rden.’
This is what Brujon had written the night before.
In spite of male and female searchers, Babet managed
to pass the note on from La Force to the Salpetriere, to a
‘good friend’ whom he had and who was shut up there. This
woman in turn transmitted the note to another woman of
her acquaintance, a certain Magnon, who was strongly sus-
pected by the police, though not yet arrested. This Magnon,