<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XIII. "The Presbytery Has Lost Nothing of Its Charm, Nor the Garden Its Brightness" </h2>
<p>A week after the occurrence of the events I have just recounted—on
the 2nd of November, to be exact—I received at my home in Paris the
following telegraphic message: "Come to the Glandier by the earliest
train. Bring revolvers. Friendly greetings. Rouletabille."</p>
<p>I have already said, I think, that at that period, being a young barrister
with but few briefs, I frequented the Palais de Justice rather for the
purpose of familiarising myself with my professional duties than for the
defence of the widow and orphan. I could, therefore, feel no surprise at
Rouletabille disposing of my time. Moreover, he knew how keenly interested
I was in his journalistic adventures in general and, above all, in the
murder at the Glandier. I had not heard from him for a week, nor of the
progress made with that mysterious case, except by the innumerable
paragraphs in the newspapers and by the very brief notes of Rouletabille
in the "Epoque." Those notes had divulged the fact that traces of human
blood had been found on the mutton-bone, as well as fresh traces of the
blood of Mademoiselle Stangerson—the old stains belonged to other
crimes, probably dating years back.</p>
<p>It may be easily imagined that the crime engaged the attention of the
press throughout the world. No crime known had more absorbed the minds of
people. It appeared to me, however, that the judicial inquiry was making
but very little progress; and I should have been very glad, if, on the
receipt of my friend's invitation to rejoin him at the Glandier, the
despatch had not contained the words, "Bring revolvers."</p>
<p>That puzzled me greatly. Rouletabille telegraphing for revolvers meant
that there might be occasion to use them. Now, I confess it without shame,
I am not a hero. But here was a friend, evidently in danger, calling on me
to go to his aid. I did not hesitate long; and after assuring myself that
the only revolver I possessed was properly loaded, I hurried towards the
Orleans station. On the way I remembered that Rouletabille had asked for
two revolvers; I therefore entered a gunsmith's shop and bought an
excellent weapon for my friend.</p>
<p>I had hoped to find him at the station at Epinay; but he was not there.
However, a cab was waiting for me and I was soon at the Glandier. Nobody
was at the gate, and it was only on the threshold of the chateau that I
met the young man. He saluted me with a friendly gesture and threw his
arms about me, inquiring warmly as to the state of my health.</p>
<p>When we were in the little sitting-room of which I have spoken,
Rouletabille made me sit down.</p>
<p>"It's going badly," he said.</p>
<p>"What's going badly?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Everything."</p>
<p>He came nearer to me and whispered:</p>
<p>"Frederic Larsan is working with might and main against Darzac."</p>
<p>This did not astonish me. I had seen the poor show Mademoiselle
Stangerson's fiance had made at the time of the examination of the
footprints. However, I immediately asked:</p>
<p>"What about that cane?"</p>
<p>"It is still in the hands of Frederic Larsan. He never lets go of it."</p>
<p>"But doesn't it prove the alibi for Monsieur Darzac?"</p>
<p>"Not at all. Gently questioned by me, Darzac denied having, on that
evening, or on any other, purchased a cane at Cassette's. However," said
Rouletabille, "I'll not swear to anything; Monsieur Darzac has such
strange fits of silence that one does not know exactly what to think of
what he says."</p>
<p>"To Frederic Larsan this cane must mean a piece of very damaging evidence.
But in what way? The time when it was bought shows it could not have been
in the murderer's possession."</p>
<p>"The time doesn't worry Larsan. He is not obliged to adopt my theory which
assumes that the murderer got into The Yellow Room between five and six
o'clock. But there's nothing to prevent him assuming that the murderer got
in between ten and eleven o'clock at night. At that hour Monsieur and
Mademoiselle Stangerson, assisted by Daddy Jacques, were engaged in making
an interesting chemical experiment in the part of the laboratory taken up
by the furnaces. Larsan says, unlikely as that may seem, that the murderer
may have slipped behind them. He has already got the examining magistrate
to listen to him. When one looks closely into it, the reasoning is absurd,
seeing that the 'intimate'—if there is one—must have known
that the professor would shortly leave the pavilion, and that the 'friend'
had only to put off operating till after the professor's departure. Why
should he have risked crossing the laboratory while the professor was in
it? And then, when he had got into The Yellow Room?</p>
<p>"There are many points to be cleared up before Larsan's theory can be
admitted. I sha'n't waste my time over it, for my theory won't allow me to
occupy myself with mere imagination. Only, as I am obliged for the moment
to keep silent, and Larsan sometimes talks, he may finish by coming out
openly against Monsieur Darzac,—if I'm not there," added the young
reporter proudly. "For there are surface evidences against Darzac, much
more convincing than that cane, which remains incomprehensible to me, all
the more so as Larsan does not in the least hesitate to let Darzac see him
with it!—I understand many things in Larsan's theory, but I can't
make anything of that cane.</p>
<p>"Is he still at the chateau?"</p>
<p>"Yes; he hardly ever leaves it!—He sleeps there, as I do, at the
request of Monsieur Stangerson, who has done for him what Monsieur Robert
Darzac has done for me. In spite of the accusation made by Larsan that
Monsieur Stangerson knows who the murderer is he yet affords him every
facility for arriving at the truth,—just as Darzac is doing for me."</p>
<p>"But you are convinced of Darzac's innocence?"</p>
<p>"At one time I did believe in the possibility of his guilt. That was when
we arrived here for the first time. The time has come for me to tell you
what has passed between Monsieur Darzac and myself."</p>
<p>Here Rouletabille interrupted himself and asked me if I had brought the
revolvers. I showed him them. Having examined both, he pronounced them
excellent, and handed them back to me.</p>
<p>"Shall we have any use for them?" I asked.</p>
<p>"No doubt; this evening. We shall pass the night here—if that won't
tire you?"</p>
<p>"On the contrary," I said with an expression that made Rouletabille laugh.</p>
<p>"No, no," he said, "this is no time for laughing. You remember the phrase
which was the 'open sesame' of this chateau full of mystery?"</p>
<p>"Yes," I said, "perfectly,—'The presbytery has lost nothing of its
charm, nor the garden its brightness.' It was the phrase which you found
on the half-burned piece of paper amongst the ashes in the laboratory."</p>
<p>"Yes; at the bottom of the paper, where the flame had not reached, was
this date: 23rd of October. Remember this date, it is highly important. I
am now going to tell you about that curious phrase. On the evening before
the crime, that is to say, on the 23rd, Monsieur and Mademoiselle
Stangerson were at a reception at the Elysee. I know that, because I was
there on duty, having to interview one of the savants of the Academy of
Philadelphia, who was being feted there. I had never before seen either
Monsieur or Mademoiselle Stangerson. I was seated in the room which
precedes the Salon des Ambassadeurs, and, tired of being jostled by so
many noble personages, I had fallen into a vague reverie, when I scented
near me the perfume of the lady in black.</p>
<p>"Do you ask me what is the 'perfume of the lady in black'? It must suffice
for you to know that it is a perfume of which I am very fond, because it
was that of a lady who had been very kind to me in my childhood,—a
lady whom I had always seen dressed in black. The lady who, that evening,
was scented with the perfume of the lady in black, was dressed in white.
She was wonderfully beautiful. I could not help rising and following her.
An old man gave her his arm and, as they passed, I heard voices say:
'Professor Stangerson and his daughter.' It was in that way I learned who
it was I was following.</p>
<p>"They met Monsieur Robert Darzac, whom I knew by sight. Professor
Stangerson, accosted by Mr. Arthur William Rance, one of the American
savants, seated himself in the great gallery, and Monsieur Robert Darzac
led Mademoiselle Stangerson into the conservatory. I followed. The weather
was very mild that evening; the garden doors were open. Mademoiselle
Stangerson threw a fichu shawl over her shoulders and I plainly saw that
it was she who was begging Monsieur Darzac to go with her into the garden.
I continued to follow, interested by the agitation plainly exhibited by
the bearing of Monsieur Darzac. They slowly passed along the wall abutting
on the Avenue Marigny. I took the central alley, walking parallel with
them, and then crossed over for the purpose of getting nearer to them. The
night was dark, and the grass deadened the sound of my steps. They had
stopped under the vacillating light of a gas jet and appeared to be both
bending over a paper held by Mademoiselle Stangerson, reading something
which deeply interested them. I stopped in the darkness and silence.</p>
<p>"Neither of them saw me, and I distinctly heard Mademoiselle Stangerson
repeat, as she was refolding the paper: 'The presbytery has lost nothing
of its charm, nor the garden its brightness!'—It was said in a tone
at once mocking and despairing, and was followed by a burst of such
nervous laughter that I think her words will never cease to sound in my
ears. But another phrase was uttered by Monsieur Robert Darzac: 'Must I
commit a crime, then, to win you?' He was in an extraordinarily agitated
state. He took the hand of Mademoiselle Stangerson and held it for a long
time to his lips, and I thought, from the movement of his shoulders, that
he was crying. Then they went away.</p>
<p>"When I returned to the great gallery," continued Rouletabille, "I saw no
more of Monsieur Robert Darzac, and I was not to see him again until after
the tragedy at the Glandier. Mademoiselle was near Mr. Rance, who was
talking with much animation, his eyes, during the conversation, glowing
with a singular brightness. Mademoiselle Stangerson, I thought, was not
even listening to what he was saying, her face expressing perfect
indifference. His face was the red face of a drunkard. When Monsieur and
Mademoiselle Stangerson left, he went to the bar and remained there. I
joined him, and rendered him some little service in the midst of the
pressing crowd. He thanked me and told me he was returning to America
three days later, that is to say, on the 26th (the day after the crime). I
talked with him about Philadelphia; he told me he had lived there for
five-and-twenty years, and that it was there he had met the illustrious
Professor Stangerson and his daughter. He drank a great deal of champagne,
and when I left him he was very nearly drunk.</p>
<p>"Such were my experiences on that evening, and I leave you to imagine what
effect the news of the attempted murder of Mademoiselle Stangerson
produced on me,—with what force those words pronounced by Monsieur
Robert Darzac, 'Must I commit a crime, then, to win you?' recurred to me.
It was not this phrase, however, that I repeated to him, when we met here
at Glandier. The sentence of the presbytery and the bright garden sufficed
to open the gate of the chateau. If you ask me if I believe now that
Monsieur Darzac is the murderer, I must say I do not. I do not think I
ever quite thought that. At the time I could not really think seriously of
anything. I had so little evidence to go on. But I needed to have at once
the proof that he had not been wounded in the hand.</p>
<p>"When we were alone together, I told him how I had chanced to overhear a
part of his conversation with Mademoiselle Stangerson in the garden of the
Elysee; and when I repeated to him the words, 'Must I commit a crime,
then, to win you?' he was greatly troubled, though much less so than he
had been by hearing me repeat the phrase about the presbytery. What threw
him into a state of real consternation was to learn from me that the day
on which he had gone to meet Mademoiselle Stangerson at the Elysee, was
the very day on which she had gone to the Post Office for the letter. It
was that letter, perhaps, which ended with the words: 'The presbytery has
lost nothing of its charm, nor the garden its brightness.' My surmise was
confirmed by my finding, if you remember, in the ashes of the laboratory,
the fragment of paper dated October the 23rd. The letter had been written
and withdrawn from the Post Office on the same day.</p>
<p>"There can be no doubt that, on returning from the Elysee that night,
Mademoiselle Stangerson had tried to destroy that compromising paper. It
was in vain that Monsieur Darzac denied that that letter had anything
whatever to do with the crime. I told him that in an affair so filled with
mystery as this, he had no right to hide this letter; that I was persuaded
it was of considerable importance; that the desperate tone in which
Mademoiselle Stangerson had pronounced the prophetic phrase,—that
his own tears, and the threat of a crime which he had professed after the
letter was read—all these facts tended to leave no room for me to
doubt. Monsieur Darzac became more and more agitated, and I determined to
take advantage of the effect I had produced on him. 'You were on the point
of being married, Monsieur,' I said negligently and without looking at
him, 'and suddenly your marriage becomes impossible because of the writer
of that letter; because as soon as his letter was read, you spoke of the
necessity for a crime to win Mademoiselle Stangerson. Therefore there is
someone between you and her someone who has attempted to kill her, so that
she should not be able to marry!' And I concluded with these words: 'Now,
monsieur, you have only to tell me in confidence the name of the
murderer!'—The words I had uttered must have struck him ominously,
for when I turned my eyes on him, I saw that his face was haggard, the
perspiration standing on his forehead, and terror showing in his eyes.</p>
<p>"'Monsieur,' he said to me, 'I am going to ask of you something which may
appear insane, but in exchange for which I place my life in your hands.
You must not tell the magistrates of what you saw and heard in the garden
of the Elysee,—neither to them nor to anybody. I swear to you, that
I am innocent, and I know, I feel, that you believe me; but I would rather
be taken for the guilty man than see justice go astray on that phrase,
"The presbytery has lost nothing of its charm, nor the garden its
brightness." The judges must know nothing about that phrase. All this
matter is in your hands. Monsieur, I leave it there; but forget the
evening at the Elysee. A hundred other roads are open to you in your
search for the criminal. I will open them for you myself. I will help you.
Will you take up your quarters here?—You may remain here to do as
you please.—Eat—sleep here—watch my actions—the
actions of all here. You shall be master of the Glandier, Monsieur; but
forget the evening at the Elysee.'"</p>
<p>Rouletabille here paused to take breath. I now understood what had
appeared so unexplainable in the demeanour of Monsieur Robert Darzac
towards my friend, and the facility with which the young reporter had been
able to install himself on the scene of the crime. My curiosity could not
fail to be excited by all I had heard. I asked Rouletabille to satisfy it
still further. What had happened at the Glandier during the past week?—Had
he not told me that there were surface indications against Monsieur Darzac
much more terrible than that of the cane found by Larsan?</p>
<p>"Everything seems to be pointing against him," replied my friend, "and the
situation is becoming exceedingly grave. Monsieur Darzac appears not to
mind it much; but in that he is wrong. I was interested only in the health
of Mademoiselle Stangerson, which was daily improving, when something
occurred that is even more mysterious than—than the mystery of The
Yellow Room!"</p>
<p>"Impossible!" I cried, "What could be more mysterious than that?"</p>
<p>"Let us first go back to Monsieur Robert Darzac," said Rouletabille,
calming me. "I have said that everything seems to be pointing against him.
The marks of the neat boots found by Frederic Larsan appear to be really
the footprints of Mademoiselle Stangerson's fiance. The marks made by the
bicycle may have been made by his bicycle. He had usually left it at the
chateau; why did he take it to Paris on that particular occasion? Was it
because he was not going to return again to the chateau? Was it because,
owing to the breaking off of his marriage, his relations with the
Stangersons were to cease? All who are interested in the matter affirm
that those relations were to continue unchanged.</p>
<p>"Frederic Larsan, however, believes that all relations were at an end.
From the day when Monsieur Darzac accompanied Mademoiselle Stangerson to
the Grands Magasins de la Louvre until the day after the crime, he had not
been at the Glandier. Remember that Mademoiselle Stangerson lost her
reticule containing the key with the brass head while she was in his
company. From that day to the evening at the Elysee, the Sorbonne
professor and Mademoiselle Stangerson did not see one another; but they
may have written to each other. Mademoiselle Stangerson went to the Post
Office to get a letter, which Larsan says was written by Robert Darzac;
for knowing nothing of what had passed at the Elysee, Larsan believes that
it was Monsieur Darzac himself who stole the reticule with the key, with
the design of forcing her consent, by getting possession of the precious
papers of her father—papers which he would have restored to him on
condition that the marriage engagement was to be fulfilled.</p>
<p>"All that would have been a very doubtful and almost absurd hypothesis, as
Larsan admitted to me, but for another and much graver circumstance. In
the first place here is something which I have not been able to explain—Monsieur
Darzac had himself, on the 24th, gone to the Post Office to ask for the
letter which Mademoiselle had called for and received on the previous
evening. The description of the man who made application tallies in every
respect with the appearance of Monsieur Darzac, who, in answer to the
questions put to him by the examining magistrate, denies that he went to
the Post Office. Now even admitting that the letter was written by him—which
I do not believe—he knew that Mademoiselle Stangerson had received
it, since he had seen it in her hands in the garden at the Elysee. It
could not have been he, then, who had gone to the Post Office, the day
after the 24th, to ask for a letter which he knew was no longer there.</p>
<p>"To me it appears clear that somebody, strongly resembling him, stole
Mademoiselle Stangerson's reticule and in that letter, had demanded of her
something which she had not sent him. He must have been surprised at the
failure of his demand, hence his application at the Post Office, to learn
whether his letter had been delivered to the person to whom it had been
addressed. Finding that it had been claimed, he had become furious. What
had he demanded? Nobody but Mademoiselle Stangerson knows. Then, on the
day following, it is reported that she had been attacked during the night,
and, the next day, I discovered that the Professor had, at the same time,
been robbed by means of the key referred to in the poste restante letter.
It would seem, then, that the man who went to the Post Office to inquire
for the letter must have been the murderer. All these arguments Larsan
applies as against Monsieur Darzac. You may be sure that the examining
magistrate, Larsan, and myself, have done our best to get from the Post
Office precise details relative to the singular personage who applied
there on the 24th of October. But nothing has been learned. We don't know
where he came from—or where he went. Beyond the description which
makes him resemble Monsieur Darzac, we know nothing.</p>
<p>"I have announced in the leading journals that a handsome reward will be
given to a driver of any public conveyance who drove a fare to No. 40,
Post Office, about ten o'clock on the morning of the 24th of October.
Information to be addressed to 'M. R.,' at the office of the 'Epoque'; but
no answer has resulted. The man may have walked; but, as he was most
likely in a hurry, there was a chance that he might have gone in a cab.
Who, I keep asking myself night and day, is the man who so strongly
resembles Monsieur Robert Darzac, and who is also known to have bought the
cane which has fallen into Larsan's hands?</p>
<p>"The most serious fact is that Monsieur Darzac was, at the very same time
that his double presented himself at the Post Office, scheduled for a
lecture at the Sorbonne. He had not delivered that lecture, and one of his
friends took his place. When I questioned him as to how he had employed
the time, he told me that he had gone for a stroll in the Bois de
Boulogne. What do you think of a professor who, instead of giving his
lecture, obtains a substitute to go for a stroll in the Bois de Boulogne?
When Frederic Larsan asked him for information on this point, he quietly
replied that it was no business of his how he spent his time in Paris. On
which Fred swore aloud that he would find out, without anybody's help.</p>
<p>"All this seems to fit in with Fred's hypothesis, namely, that Monsieur
Stangerson allowed the murderer to escape in order to avoid a scandal. The
hypothesis is further substantiated by the fact that Darzac was in The
Yellow Room and was permitted to get away. That hypothesis I believe to be
a false one.—Larsan is being misled by it, though that would not
displease me, did it not affect an innocent person. Now does that
hypothesis really mislead Frederic Larsan? That is the question—that
is the question."</p>
<p>"Perhaps he is right," I cried, interrupting Rouletabille. "Are you sure
that Monsieur Darzac is innocent?—It seems to me that these are
extraordinary coincidences—"</p>
<p>"Coincidences," replied my friend, "are the worst enemies to truth."</p>
<p>"What does the examining magistrate think now of the matter?"</p>
<p>"Monsieur de Marquet hesitates to accuse Monsieur Darzac, in the absence
of absolute proofs. Not only would he have public opinion wholly against
him, to say nothing of the Sorbonne, but Monsieur and Mademoiselle
Stangerson. She adores Monsieur Robert Darzac. Indistinctly as she saw the
murderer, it would be hard to make the public believe that she could not
have recognised him, if Darzac had been the criminal. No doubt The Yellow
Room was very dimly lit; but a night-light, however small, gives some
light. Here, my boy, is how things stood when, three days, or rather three
nights ago, an extraordinarily strange incident occurred."</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />