<p>"JOSEPH ROULETABILLE." <SPAN name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XIX. Rouletabille Invites Me to Breakfast at the Donjon Inn </h2>
<p>It was not until later that Rouletabille sent me the note-book in which he
had written at length the story of the phenomenon of the inexplicable
gallery. On the day I arrived at the Glandier and joined him in his room,
he recounted to me, with the greatest detail, all that I have now related,
telling me also how he had spent several hours in Paris where he had
learned nothing that could be of any help to him.</p>
<p>The event of the inexplicable gallery had occurred on the night between
the 29th and 30th of October, that is to say, three days before my return
to the chateau. It was on the 2nd of November, then, that I went back to
the Glandier, summoned there by my friend's telegram, and taking the
revolvers with me.</p>
<p>I am now in Rouletabille's room and he has finished his recital.</p>
<p>While he had been telling me the story I noticed him continually rubbing
the glass of the eyeglasses he had found on the side table. From the
evident pleasure he was taking in handling them I felt they must be one of
those sensible evidences destined to enter what he had called the circle
of the right end of his reason. That strange and unique way of his, to
express himself in terms wonderfully adequate for his thoughts, no longer
surprised me. It was often necessary to know his thought to understand the
terms he used; and it was not easy to penetrate into Rouletabille's
thinking.</p>
<p>This lad's brain was one of the most curious things I have ever observed.
Rouletabille went on the even tenor of his way without suspecting the
astonishment and even bewilderment he roused in others. I am sure he was
not himself in the least conscious of the originality of his genius. He
was himself and at ease wherever he happened to be.</p>
<p>When he had finished his recital he asked me what I thought of it. I
replied that I was much puzzled by his question. Then he begged me to try,
in my turn, to take my reason in hand "by the right end."</p>
<p>"Very well," I said. "It seems to me that the point of departure of my
reason would be this—there can be no doubt that the murderer you
pursued was in the gallery." I paused.</p>
<p>"After making so good a start, you ought not to stop so soon," he
exclaimed. "Come, make another effort."</p>
<p>"I'll try. Since he disappeared from the gallery without passing through
any door or window, he must have escaped by some other opening."</p>
<p>Rouletabille looked at me pityingly, smiled carelessly, and remarked that
I was reasoning like a postman, or—like Frederic Larsan.</p>
<p>Rouletabille had alternate fits of admiration and disdain for the great
Fred. It all depended as to whether Larsan's discoveries tallied with
Rouletabille's reasoning or not. When they did he would exclaim: "He is
really great!" When they did not he would grunt and mutter, "What an ass!"
It was a petty side of the noble character of this strange youth.</p>
<p>We had risen, and he led me into the park. When we reached the court and
were making towards the gate, the sound of blinds thrown back against the
wall made us turn our heads, and we saw, at a window on the first floor of
the chateau, the ruddy and clean shaven face of a person I did not
recognise.</p>
<p>"Hullo!" muttered Rouletabille. "Arthur Rance!"—He lowered his head,
quickened his pace, and I heard him ask himself between his teeth: "Was he
in the chateau that night? What is he doing here?"</p>
<p>We had gone some distance from the chateau when I asked him who this
Arthur Rance was, and how he had come to know him. He referred to his
story of that morning and I remembered that Mr. Arthur W. Rance was the
American from Philadelphia with whom he had had so many drinks at the
Elysee reception.</p>
<p>"But was he not to have left France almost immediately?" I asked.</p>
<p>"No doubt; that's why I am surprised to find him here still, and not only
in France, but above all, at the Glandier. He did not arrive this morning;
and he did not get here last night. He must have got here before dinner,
then. Why didn't the concierges tell me?"</p>
<p>I reminded my friend, apropos of the concierges, that he had not yet told
me what had led him to get them set at liberty.</p>
<p>We were close to their lodge. Monsieur and Madame Bernier saw us coming. A
frank smile lit up their happy faces. They seemed to harbour no
ill-feeling because of their detention. My young friend asked them at what
hour Mr. Arthur Rance had arrived. They answered that they did not know he
was at the chateau. He must have come during the evening of the previous
night, but they had not had to open the gate for him, because, being a
great walker, and not wishing that a carriage should be sent to meet him,
he was accustomed to get off at the little hamlet of Saint-Michel, from
which he came to the chateau by way of the forest. He reached the park by
the grotto of Sainte-Genevieve, over the little gate of which, giving on
to the park, he climbed.</p>
<p>As the concierges spoke, I saw Rouletabille's face cloud over and exhibit
disappointment—a disappointment, no doubt, with himself. Evidently
he was a little vexed, after having worked so much on the spot, with so
minute a study of the people and events at the Glandier, that he had to
learn now that Arthur Rance was accustomed to visit the chateau.</p>
<p>"You say that Monsieur Arthur Rance is accustomed to come to the chateau.
When did he come here last?"</p>
<p>"We can't tell you exactly," replied Madame Bernier—that was the
name of the concierge—"we couldn't know while they were keeping us
in prison. Besides, as the gentleman comes to the chateau without passing
through our gate he goes away by the way he comes."</p>
<p>"Do you know when he came the first time?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, Monsieur!—nine years ago."</p>
<p>"He was in France nine years ago, then," said Rouletabille, "and, since
that time, as far as you know, how many times has he been at the
Glandier?"</p>
<p>"Three times."</p>
<p>"When did he come the last time, as far as you know?"</p>
<p>"A week before the attempt in The Yellow Room."</p>
<p>Rouletabille put another question—this time addressing himself
particularly to the woman:</p>
<p>"In the grove of the parquet?"</p>
<p>"In the grove of the parquet," she replied.</p>
<p>"Thanks!" said Rouletabille. "Be ready for me this evening."</p>
<p>He spoke the last words with a finger on his lips as if to command silence
and discretion.</p>
<p>We left the park and took the way to the Donjon Inn.</p>
<p>"Do you often eat here?"</p>
<p>"Sometimes."</p>
<p>"But you also take your meals at the chateau?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Larsan and I are sometimes served in one of our rooms."</p>
<p>"Hasn't Monsieur Stangerson ever invited you to his own table?"</p>
<p>"Never."</p>
<p>"Does your presence at the chateau displease him?"</p>
<p>"I don't know; but, in any case, he does not make us feel that we are in
his way."</p>
<p>"Doesn't he question you?"</p>
<p>"Never. He is in the same state of mind as he was in at the door of The
Yellow Room when his daughter was being murdered, and when he broke open
the door and did not find the murderer. He is persuaded, since he could
discover nothing, that there's no reason why we should be able to discover
more than he did. But he has made it his duty, since Larsan expressed his
theory, not to oppose us."</p>
<p>Rouletabille buried himself in thought again for some time. He aroused
himself later to tell me of how he came to set the two concierges free.</p>
<p>"I went recently to see Monsieur Stangerson, and took with me a piece of
paper on which was written: 'I promise, whatever others may say, to keep
in my service my two faithful servants, Bernier and his wife.' I explained
to him that, by signing that document, he would enable me to compel those
two people to speak out; and I declared my own assurance of their
innocence of any part in the crime. That was also his opinion. The
examining magistrate, after it was signed, presented the document to the
Berniers, who then did speak. They said, what I was certain they would
say, as soon as they were sure they would not lose their place.</p>
<p>"They confessed to poaching on Monsieur Stangerson's estates, and it was
while they were poaching, on the night of the crime, that they were found
not far from the pavilion at the moment when the outrage was being
committed. Some rabbits they caught in that way were sold by them to the
landlord of the Donjon Inn, who served them to his customers, or sent them
to Paris. That was the truth, as I had guessed from the first. Do you
remember what I said, on entering the Donjon Inn?—'We shall have to
eat red meat—now!' I had heard the words on the same morning when we
arrived at the park gate. You heard them also, but you did not attach any
importance to them. You recollect, when we reached the park gate, that we
stopped to look at a man who was running by the side of the wall, looking
every minute at his watch. That was Larsan. Well, behind us the landlord
of the Donjon Inn, standing on his doorstep, said to someone inside: 'We
shall have to eat red meat—now.'</p>
<p>"Why that 'now'? When you are, as I am, in search of some hidden secret,
you can't afford to have anything escape you. You've got to know the
meaning of everything. We had come into a rather out-of-the-way part of
the country which had been turned topsy-turvey by a crime, and my reason
led me to suspect every phrase that could bear upon the event of the day.
'Now,' I took to mean, 'since the outrage.' In the course of my inquiry,
therefore, I sought to find a relation between that phrase and the
tragedy. We went to the Donjon Inn for breakfast; I repeated the phrase
and saw, by the surprise and trouble on Daddy Mathieu's face, that I had
not exaggerated its importance, so far as he was concerned.</p>
<p>"I had just learned that the concierges had been arrested. Daddy Mathieu
spoke of them as of dear friends—people for whom one is sorry. That
was a reckless conjunction of ideas, I said to myself. 'Now,' that the
concierges are arrested, 'we shall have to eat red meat.' No more
concierges, no more game! The hatred expressed by Daddy Mathieu for
Monsieur Stangerson's forest-keeper—a hatred he pretended was shared
by the concierges led me easily to think of poaching. Now as all the
evidence showed the concierges had not been in bed at the time of the
tragedy, why were they abroad that night? As participants in the crime? I
was not disposed to think so. I had already arrived at the conclusion, by
steps of which I will tell you later—that the assassin had had no
accomplice, and that the tragedy held a mystery between Mademoiselle
Stangerson and the murderer, a mystery with which the concierges had
nothing to do.</p>
<p>"With that theory in my mind, I searched for proof in their lodge, which,
as you know, I entered. I found there under their bed, some springs and
brass wire. 'Ah!' I thought, 'these things explain why they were out in
the park at night!' I was not surprised at the dogged silence they
maintained before the examining magistrate, even under the accusation so
grave as that of being accomplices in the crime. Poaching would save them
from the Assize Court, but it would lose them their places; and, as they
were perfectly sure of their innocence of the crime they hoped it would
soon be established, and then their poaching might go on as usual. They
could always confess later. I, however, hastened their confession by means
of the document Monsieur Stangerson signed. They gave all the necessary
'proofs,' were set at liberty, and have now a lively gratitude for me. Why
did I not get them released sooner? Because I was not sure that nothing
more than poaching was against them. I wanted to study the ground. As the
days went by, my conviction became more and more certain. The day after
the events of the inexplicable gallery I had need of help I could rely on,
so I resolved to have them released at once."</p>
<p>That was how Joseph Rouletabille explained himself. Once more I could not
but be astonished at the simplicity of the reasoning which had brought him
to the truth of the matter. Certainly this was no big thing; but I think,
myself, that the young man will, one of these days, explain with the same
simplicity, the fearful tragedy in The Yellow Room as well as the
phenomenon of the inexplicable gallery.</p>
<p>We reached the Donjon Inn and entered it.</p>
<p>This time we did not see the landlord, but were received with a pleasant
smile by the hostess. I have already described the room in which we found
ourselves, and I have given a glimpse of the charming blonde woman with
the gentle eyes who now immediately began to prepare our breakfast.</p>
<p>"How's Daddy Mathieu?" asked Rouletabille.</p>
<p>"Not much better—not much better; he is still confined to his bed."</p>
<p>"His rheumatism still sticks to him, then?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Last night I was again obliged to give him morphine—the only
drug that gives him any relief."</p>
<p>She spoke in a soft voice. Everything about her expressed gentleness. She
was, indeed, a beautiful woman; somewhat with an air of indolence, with
great eyes seemingly black and blue—amorous eyes. Was she happy with
her crabbed, rheumatic husband? The scene at which we had once been
present did not lead us to believe that she was; yet there was something
in her bearing that was not suggestive of despair. She disappeared into
the kitchen to prepare our repast, leaving on the table a bottle of
excellent cider. Rouletabille filled our earthenware mugs, loaded his
pipe, and quietly explained to me his reason for asking me to come to the
Glandier with revolvers.</p>
<p>"Yes," he said, contemplatively looking at the clouds of smoke he was
puffing out, "yes, my dear boy, I expect the assassin to-night." A brief
silence followed, which I took care not to interrupt, and then he went on:</p>
<p>"Last night, just as I was going to bed, Monsieur Robert Darzac knocked at
my room. When he came in he confided to me that he was compelled to go to
Paris the next day, that is, this morning. The reason which made this
journey necessary was at once peremptory and mysterious; it was not
possible for him to explain its object to me. 'I go, and yet,' he added,
'I would give my life not to leave Mademoiselle Stangerson at this
moment.' He did not try to hide that he believed her to be once more in
danger. 'It will not greatly astonish me if something happens to-morrow
night,' he avowed, 'and yet I must be absent. I cannot be back at the
Glandier before the morning of the day after to-morrow.'</p>
<p>"I asked him to explain himself, and this is all he would tell me. His
anticipation of coming danger had come to him solely from the coincidence
that Mademoiselle Stangerson had been twice attacked, and both times when
he had been absent. On the night of the incident of the inexplicable
gallery he had been obliged to be away from the Glandier. On the night of
the tragedy in The Yellow Room he had also not been able to be at the
Glandier, though this was the first time he had declared himself on the
matter. Now a man so moved who would still go away must be acting under
compulsion—must be obeying a will stronger than his own. That was
how I reasoned, and I told him so. He replied 'Perhaps.'—I asked him
if Mademoiselle Stangerson was compelling him. He protested that she was
not. His determination to go to Paris had been taken without any
conference with Mademoiselle Stangerson.</p>
<p>"To cut the story short, he repeated that his belief in the possibility of
a fresh attack was founded entirely on the extraordinary coincidence. 'If
anything happens to Mademoiselle Stangerson,' he said, 'it would be
terrible for both of us. For her, because her life would be in danger; for
me because I could neither defend her from the attack nor tell of where I
had been. I am perfectly aware of the suspicions cast on me. The examining
magistrate and Monsieur Larsan are both on the point of believing in my
guilt. Larsan tracked me the last time I went to Paris, and I had all the
trouble in the world to get rid of him.'</p>
<p>"'Why do you not tell me the name of the murderer now, if you know it?' I
cried.</p>
<p>"Monsieur Darzac appeared extremely troubled by my question, and replied
to me in a hesitating tone:</p>
<p>"'I?—I know the name of the murderer? Why, how could I know his
name?'</p>
<p>"I at once replied: 'From Mademoiselle Stangerson.'</p>
<p>"He grew so pale that I thought he was about to faint, and I saw that I
had hit the nail right on the head. Mademoiselle and he knew the name of
the murderer! When he recovered himself, he said to me: 'I am going to
leave you. Since you have been here I have appreciated your exceptional
intelligence and your unequalled ingenuity. But I ask this service of you.
Perhaps I am wrong to fear an attack during the coming night; but, as I
must act with foresight, I count on you to frustrate any attempt that may
be made. Take every step needful to protect Mademoiselle Stangerson. Keep
a most careful watch of her room. Don't go to sleep, nor allow yourself
one moment of repose. The man we dread is remarkably cunning—with a
cunning that has never been equalled. If you keep watch his very cunning
may save her; because it's impossible that he should not know that you are
watching; and knowing it, he may not venture.'</p>
<p>"'Have you spoken of all this to Monsieur Stangerson?'</p>
<p>"'No. I do not wish him to ask me, as you just now did, for the name of
the murderer. I tell you all this, Monsieur Rouletabille, because I have
great, very great, confidence in you. I know that you do not suspect me.'</p>
<p>"The poor man spoke in jerks. He was evidently suffering. I pitied him,
the more because I felt sure that he would rather allow himself to be
killed than tell me who the murderer was. As for Mademoiselle Stangerson,
I felt that she would rather allow herself to be murdered than denounce
the man of The Yellow Room and of the inexplicable gallery. The man must
be dominating her, or both, by some inscrutable power. They were dreading
nothing so much as the chance of Monsieur Stangerson knowing that his
daughter was 'held' by her assailant. I made Monsieur Darzac understand
that he had explained himself sufficiently, and that he might refrain from
telling me any more than he had already told me. I promised him to watch
through the night. He insisted that I should establish an absolutely
impassable barrier around Mademoiselle Stangerson's chamber, around the
boudoir where the nurses were sleeping, and around the drawing-room where,
since the affair of the inexplicable gallery, Monsieur Stangerson had
slept. In short, I was to put a cordon round the whole apartment.</p>
<p>"From his insistence I gathered that Monsieur Darzac intended not only to
make it impossible for the expected man to reach the chamber of
Mademoiselle Stangerson, but to make that impossibility so visibly clear
that, seeing himself expected, he would at once go away. That was how I
interpreted his final words when we parted: 'You may mention your
suspicions of the expected attack to Monsieur Stangerson, to Daddy
Jacques, to Frederic Larsan, and to anybody in the chateau.'</p>
<p>"The poor fellow left me hardly knowing what he was saying. My silence and
my eyes told him that I had guessed a large part of his secret. And,
indeed, he must have been at his wits' end, to have come to me at such a
time, and to abandon Mademoiselle Stangerson in spite of his fixed idea as
to the consequence.</p>
<p>"When he was gone, I began to think that I should have to use even a
greater cunning than his so that if the man should come that night, he
might not for a moment suspect that his coming had been expected.
Certainly! I would allow him to get in far enough, so that, dead or alive,
I might see his face clearly! He must be got rid of. Mademoiselle
Stangerson must be freed from this continual impending danger.</p>
<p>"Yes, my boy," said Rouletabille, after placing his pipe on the table, and
emptying his mug of cider, "I must see his face distinctly, so as to make
sure to impress it on that part of my brain where I have drawn my circle
of reasoning."</p>
<p>The landlady re-appeared at that moment, bringing in the traditional bacon
omelette. Rouletabille chaffed her a little, and she took the chaff with
the most charming good humour.</p>
<p>"She is much jollier when Daddy Mathieu is in bed with his rheumatism,"
Rouletabille said to me.</p>
<p>But I had eyes neither for Rouletabille nor for the landlady's smiles. I
was entirely absorbed over the last words of my young friend and in
thinking over Monsieur Robert Darzac's strange behaviour.</p>
<p>When he had finished his omelette and we were again alone, Rouletabille
continued the tale of his confidences.</p>
<p>"When I sent you my telegram this morning," he said, "I had only the word
of Monsieur Darzac, that 'perhaps' the assassin would come to-night. I can
now say that he will certainly come. I expect him."</p>
<p>"What has made you feel this certainty?"</p>
<p>"I have been sure since half-past ten o'clock this morning that he would
come. I knew that before we saw Arthur Rance at the window in the court."</p>
<p>"Ah!" I said, "But, again—what made you so sure? And why since
half-past ten this morning?"</p>
<p>"Because, at half-past ten, I had proof that Mademoiselle Stangerson was
making as many efforts to permit of the murderer's entrance as Monsieur
Robert Darzac had taken precautions against it."</p>
<p>"Is that possible!" I cried. "Haven't you told me that Mademoiselle
Stangerson loves Monsieur Robert Darzac?"</p>
<p>"I told you so because it is the truth."</p>
<p>"Then do you see nothing strange—"</p>
<p>"Everything in this business is strange, my friend; but take my word for
it, the strangeness you now feel is nothing to the strangeness that's to
come!"</p>
<p>"It must be admitted, then," I said, "that Mademoiselle Stangerson and her
murderer are in communication—at any rate in writing?"</p>
<p>"Admit it, my friend, admit it! You don't risk anything! I told you about
the letter left on her table, on the night of the inexplicable gallery
affair,—the letter that disappeared into the pocket of Mademoiselle
Stangerson. Why should it not have been a summons to a meeting? Might he
not, as soon as he was sure of Darzac's absence, appoint the meeting for
'the coming night?"</p>
<p>And my friend laughed silently. There are moments when I ask myself if he
is not laughing at me.</p>
<p>The door of the inn opened. Rouletabille was on his feet so suddenly that
one might have thought he had received an electric shock.</p>
<p>"Mr. Arthur Rance!" he cried.</p>
<p>Mr. Arthur Rance stood before us calmly bowing.</p>
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