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<h2> CHAPTER XXVIII. In Which It Is Proved That One Does Not Always Think of Everything </h2>
<p>Great excitement prevailed when Rouletabille had finished. The court-room
became agitated with the murmurings of suppressed applause. Maitre Henri
Robert called for an adjournment of the trial and was supported in his
motion by the public prosecutor himself. The case was adjourned. The next
day Monsieur Robert Darzac was released on bail, while Daddy Jacques
received the immediate benefit of a "no cause for action." Search was
everywhere made for Frederic Larsan, but in vain. Monsieur Darzac finally
escaped the awful calamity which, at one time, had threatened him. After a
visit to Mademoiselle Stangerson, he was led to hope that she might, by
careful nursing, one day recover her reason.</p>
<p>Rouletabille, naturally, became the "man of the hour." On leaving the
Palais de Justice, the crowd bore him aloft in triumph. The press of the
whole world published his exploits and his photograph. He, who had
interviewed so many illustrious personages, had himself become illustrious
and was interviewed in his turn. I am glad to say that the enormous
success in no way turned his head.</p>
<p>We left Versailles together, after having dined at "The Dog That Smokes."
In the train I put a number of questions to him which, during our meal,
had been on the tip of my tongue, but which I had refrained from uttering,
knowing he did not like to talk "shop" while eating.</p>
<p>"My friend," I said, "that Larsan case is wonderful. It is worthy of you."</p>
<p>He begged me to say no more, and humorously pretended an anxiety for me
should I give way to silly praise of him because of a personal admiration
for his ability.</p>
<p>"I'll come to the point, then," I said, not a little nettled. "I am still
in the dark as to your reason for going to America. When you left the
Glandier you had found out, if I rightly understand, all about Frederic
Larsan; you had discovered the exact way he had attempted the murder?"</p>
<p>"Quite so. And you," he said, turning the conversation, "did you suspect
nothing?"</p>
<p>"Nothing!"</p>
<p>"It's incredible!"</p>
<p>"I don't see how I could have suspected anything. You took great pains to
conceal your thoughts from me. Had you already suspected Larsan when you
sent for me to bring the revolvers?"</p>
<p>"Yes! I had come to that conclusion through the incident of the
'inexplicable gallery.' Larsan's return to Mademoiselle Stangerson's room,
however, had not then been cleared up by the eye-glasses. My suspicions
were the outcome of my reasoning only; and the idea of Larsan being the
murderer seemed so extraordinary that I resolved to wait for actual
evidence before venturing to act. Nevertheless, the suspicion worried me,
and I sometimes spoke to the detective in a way that ought to have opened
your eyes. I spoke disparagingly of his methods. But until I found the
eye-glasses I could but look upon my suspicion of him in the light of an
absurd hypothesis only. You can imagine my elation after I had explained
Larsan's movements. I remember well rushing into my room like a mad-man
and crying to you: 'I'll get the better of the great Fred. I'll get the
better of him in a way that will make a sensation!'</p>
<p>"I was then thinking of Larsan, the murderer. It was that same evening
that Darzac begged me to watch over Mademoiselle Stangerson. I made no
efforts until after we had dined with Larsan, until ten o'clock. He was
right there before me, and I could afford to wait. You ought to have
suspected, because when we were talking of the murderer's arrival, I said
to you: 'I am quite sure Larsan will be here to-night.'</p>
<p>"But one important point escaped us both. It was one which ought to have
opened our eyes to Larsan. Do you remember the bamboo cane? I was
surprised to find Larsan had made no use of that evidence against Robert
Darzac. Had it not been purchased by a man whose description tallied
exactly with that of Darzac? Well, just before I saw him off at the train,
after the recess during the trial, I asked him why he hadn't used the cane
evidence. He told me he had never had any intention of doing so; that our
discovery of it in the little inn at Epinay had much embarrassed him. If
you will remember, he told us then that the cane had been given him in
London. Why did we not immediately say to ourselves: 'Fred is lying. He
could not have had this cane in London. He was not in London. He bought it
in Paris'? Then you found out, on inquiry at Cassette's, that the cane had
been bought by a person dressed very like Robert Darzac, though, as we
learned later, from Darzac himself, it was not he who had made the
purchase. Couple this with the fact we already knew, from the letter at
the poste restante, that there was actually a man in Paris who was passing
as Robert Darzac, why did we not immediately fix on Fred himself?</p>
<p>"Of course, his position at the Surete was against us; but when we saw the
evident eagerness on his part to find convicting evidence against Darzac,
nay, even the passion he displayed in his pursuit of the man, the lie
about the cane should have had a new meaning for us. If you ask why Larsan
bought the cane, if he had no intention of manufacturing evidence against
Darzac by means of it, the answer is quite simple. He had been wounded in
the hand by Mademoiselle Stangerson, so that the cane was useful to enable
him to close his hand in carrying it. You remember I noticed that he
always carried it?</p>
<p>"All these details came back to my mind when I had once fixed on Larsan as
the criminal. But they were too late then to be of any use to me. On the
evening when he pretended to be drugged I looked at his hand and saw a
thin silk bandage covering the signs of a slight healing wound. Had we
taken a quicker initiative at the time Larsan told us that lie about the
cane, I am certain he would have gone off, to avoid suspicion. All the
same, we worried Larsan or Ballmeyer without our knowing it."</p>
<p>"But," I interrupted, "if Larsan had no intention of using the cane as
evidence against Darzac, why had he made himself up to look like the man
when he went in to buy it?"</p>
<p>"He had not specially 'made up' as Darzac to buy the cane; he had come
straight to Cassette's immediately after he had attacked Mademoiselle
Stangerson. His wound was troubling him and, as he was passing along the
Avenue de l'Opera, the idea of the cane came to his mind and he acted on
it. It was then eight o'clock. And I, who had hit upon the very hour of
the occurrence of the tragedy, almost convinced that Darzac was not the
criminal, and knowing of the cane, I still never suspected Larsan. There
are times..."</p>
<p>"There are times," I said, "when the greatest intellects—..."
Rouletabille shut my mouth. I still continued to chide him, but, finding
he did not reply, I saw he was no longer paying any attention to what I
was saying. I found he was fast asleep.</p>
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