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    The Mystery of the Yellow Room

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    chamber and under the bed, as I had done on entering, to see that

      there was nobody in it but my daughter lying on the floor."

      "What do you think, Monsieur Darzac?" asked the magistrate.

      Monsieur Darzac replied that he had no opinion to express. Monsieur

      Dax, the Chief of the Surete who, so far, had been listening and

      examining the room, at length deigned to open his lips:

      "While search is being made for the criminal, we had better try to

      find out the motive for the crime; that will advance us a little,"

      he said. Turning towards Monsieur Stangerson, he continued, in the

      even, intelligent tone indicative of a strong character, "I

      understand that Mademoiselle was shortly to have been married?"

      The professor looked sadly at Monsieur Robert Darzac.

      "To my friend here, whom I should have been happy to call my son

      --to Monsieur Robert Darzac."

      "Mademoiselle Stangerson is much better and is rapidly recovering

      from her wounds. The marriage is simply delayed, is it not,

      Monsieur?" insisted the Chief of the Surete.

      "I hope so.

      "What! Is there any doubt about that?"

      Monsieur Stangerson did not answer. Monsieur Robert Darzac seemed

      agitated. I saw that his hand trembled as it fingered his

      watchchain. Monsieur Dax coughed, as did Monsieur de Marquet.

      Both were evidently embarrassed.

      "You understand, Monsieur Stangerson," he said, "that in an affair

      so perplexing as this, we cannot neglect anything; we must know all,

      even the smallest and seemingly most futile thing concerning the

      victim--information apparently the most insignificant. Why do you

      doubt that this marriage will take place? You expressed a hope; but

      the hope implies a doubt. Why do you doubt?"

      Monsieur Stangerson made a visible effort to recover himself.

      "Yes, Monsieur," he said at length, "you are right. It will be

      best that you should know something which, if I concealed it, might

      appear to be of importance; Monsieur Darzac agrees with me in this."

      Monsieur Darzac, whose pallor at that moment seemed to me to be

      altogether abnormal, made a sign of assent. I gathered he was

      unable to speak.

      "I want you to know then," continued Monsieur Stangerson, "that my

      daughter has sworn never to leave me, and adheres firmly to her

      oath, in spite of all my prayers and all that I have argued to induce

      her to marry. We have known Monsieur Robert Darzac many years. He

      loves my child; and I believed that she loved him; because she only

      recently consented to this marriage which I desire with all my heart.

      I am an old man, Monsieur, and it was a happy hour to me when I knew

      that, after I had gone, she would have at her side, one who loved her

      and who would help her in continuing our common labours. I love and

      esteem Monsieur Darzac both for his greatness of heart and for his

      devotion to science. But, two days before the tragedy, for I know

      not what reason, my daughter declared to me that she would never

      marry Monsieur Darzac."

      A dead silence followed Monsieur Stangerson's words. It was a

      moment fraught with suspense.

      "Did Mademoiselle give you any explanation,--did she tell you what

      her motive was?" asked Monsieur Dax.

      "She told me she was too old to marry--that she had waited too

      long. She said she had given much thought to the matter and while

      she had a great esteem, even affection, for Monsieur Darzac, she

      felt it would be better if things remained as they were. She would

      be happy, she said, to see the relations between ourselves and

      Monsieur Darzac become closer, but only on the understanding that

      there would be no more talk of marriage."

      "That is very strange!" muttered Monsieur Dax.

      "Strange!" repeated Monsieur de Marquet.

      "You'll certainly not find the motive there, Monsieur Dax," Monsieur

      Stangerson said with a cold smile.

      "In any case, the motive was not theft!" said the Chief impatiently.

      "Oh! we are quite convinced of that!" cried the examining magistrate.

      At that moment the door of the laboratory opened and the officer in

      charge of the gendarmes entered and handed a card to the examining

      magistrate. Monsieur de Marquet read it and uttered a half angry

      exclamation:

      "This is really too much!" he cried.

      "What is it?" asked the Chief.

      "It's the card of a young reporter engaged on the 'Epoque,' a

      Monsieur Joseph Rouletabille. It has these words written on it:

      'One of the motives of the crime was robbery.'"

      The Chief smiled.

      "Ah,--young Rouletabille--I've heard of him he is considered

      rather clever. Let him come in."

      Monsieur Joseph Rouletabille was allowed to enter. I had made his

      acquaintance in the train that morning on the way to Epinay-sur-Orge.

      He had introduced himself almost against my wish into our

      compartment. I had better say at once that his manners, and the

      arrogance with which he assumed to know what was incomprehensible

      even to us, impressed him unfavourably on my mind. I do not like

      journalists. They are a class of writers to be avoided as the pest.

      They think that everything is permissible and they respect nothing.

      Grant them the least favour, allow them even to approach you, and

      you never can tell what annoyance they may give you. This one

      appears to be scarcely twenty years old, and the effrontery with

      which he dared to question us and discuss the matter with us made

      him particularly obnoxious to me. Besides, he had a way of

      expressing himself that left us guessing as to whether he was mocking

      us or not. I know quite well that the 'Epoque' is an influential

      paper with which it is well to be on good terms, but the paper ought

      not to allow itself to be represented by sneaking reporters.

      Monsieur Joseph Rouletabille entered the laboratory, bowed to us,

      and waited for Monsieur de Marquet to ask him to explain his

      presence.

      "You pretend, Monsieur, that you know the motive for the crime, and

      that that motive--in the face of all the evidence that has been

      forthcoming--was robbery?"

      "No, Monsieur, I do not pretend that. I do not say that robbery

      was the motive for the crime, and I don't believe it was."

      "Then, what is the meaning of this card?"

      "It means that robbery was one of the motives for the crime."

      "What leads you to think that?"

      "If you will be good enough to accompany me, I will show you."

      The young man asked us to follow him into the vestibule, and we did.

      He led us towards the lavatory and begged Monsieur de Marquet to

      kneel beside him. This lavatory is lit by the glass door, and, when

      the door was open, the light which penetrated was sufficient to light

      it perfectly. Monsieur de Marquet and Monsieur Joseph Rouletabille

      knelt down on the threshold, and the young man pointed to a spot on

      the pavement.

      "The stones of the lavatory have not been washed by Daddy Jacques

      for some time," he said; "that can be seen by the layer of dust that

      covers them. Now, notice here, the marks of t
    wo large footprints

      and the black ash they left where they have been. That ash is

      nothing else than the charcoal dust that covers the path along which

      you must pass through the forest, in order to get directly from

      Epinay to the Glandier. You know there is a little village of

      charcoal-burners at that place, who make large quantities of

      charcoal. What the murderer did was to come here at midday, when

      there was nobody at the pavilion, and attempt his robbery."

      "But what robbery?--Where do you see any signs of robbery? What

      proves to you that a robbery has been committed?" we all cried at

      once. "What put me on the trace of it," continued the journalist...

      "Was this?" interrupted Monsieur de Marquet, still on his knees.

      "Evidently," said Rouletabille.

      And Monsieur de Marquet explained that there were on the dust of

      the pavement marks of two footsteps, as well as the impression,

      freshly-made, of a heavy rectangular parcel, the marks of the cord

      with which it had been fastened being easily distinguished.

      "You have been here, then, Monsieur Rouletabille? I thought I had

      given orders to Daddy Jacques, who Was left in charge of the

      pavilion, not to allow anybody to enter."

      "Don't scold Daddy Jacques, I came here with Monsieur Robert Darzac."

      "Ah,--Indeed!" exclaimed Monsieur de Marquet, disagreeably, casting

      a side-glance at Monsieur Darzac, who remained perfectly silent.

      "When I saw the mark of the parcel by the side of the footprints, I

      had no doubt as to the robbery," replied Monsieur Rouletabille. "The

      thief had not brought a parcel with him; he had made one here--a

      parcel with the stolen objects, no doubt; and he put it in this

      corner intending to take it away when the moment came for him to

      make his escape. He had also placed his heavy boots beside the

      parcel,--for, see--there are no marks of steps leading to the

      marks left by the boots, which were placed side by side. That

      accounts for the fact that the murderer left no trace of his steps

      when he fled from The Yellow Room, nor any in the laboratory, nor in

      the vestibule. After entering The Yellow Room in his boots, he took

      them off, finding them troublesome, or because he wished to make as

      little noise as possible. The marks made by him in going through

      the vestibule and the laboratory were subsequently washed out by

      Daddy Jacques. Having, for some reason or other, taken off his

      boots, the murderer carried them in his hand and placed them by the

      side of the parcel he had made,--by that time the robbery had been

      accomplished. The man then returned to The Yellow Room and slipped

      under the bed, where the mark of his body is perfectly visible on

      the floor and even on the mat, which has been slightly moved from

      its place and creased. Fragments of straw also, recently torn, bear

      witness to the murderer's movements under the bed."

      "Yes, yes,--we know all about that," said Monsieur de Marquet.

      "The robber had another motive for returning to hide under the bed,"

      continued the astonishing boy-journalist. "You might think that he

      was trying to hide himself quickly on seeing, through the vestibule

      window, Monsieur and Mademoiselle Stangerson about to enter the

      pavilion. It would have been much easier for him to have climbed

      up to the attic and hidden there, waiting for an opportunity to get

      away, if his purpose had been only flight.--No! No!--he had to

      be in The Yellow Room."

      Here the Chief intervened.

      "That's not at all bad, young man. I compliment you. If we do not

      know yet how the murderer succeeded in getting away, we can at any

      rate see how he came in and committed the robbery. But what did he

      steal?"

      "Something very valuable," replied the young reporter.

      At that moment we heard a cry from the laboratory. We rushed in

      and found Monsieur Stangerson, his eyes haggard, his limbs

      trembling, pointing to a sort of bookcase which he had opened, and

      which, we saw, was empty. At the same instant he sank into the

      large armchair that was placed before the desk and groaned, the

      tears rolling down his cheeks, "I have been robbed again! For God's

      sake, do not say a word of this to my daughter. She would be more

      pained than I am." He heaved a deep sigh and added, in a tone I

      shall never forget: "After all, what does it matter,--so long as

      she lives!"

      "She will live!" said Monsieur Darzac, in a voice strangely touching.

      "And we will find the stolen articles," said Monsieur Dax. "But

      what was in the cabinet?"

      "Twenty years of my life," replied the illustrious professor sadly,

      "or rather of our lives--the lives of myself and my daughter! Yes,

      our most precious documents, the records of our secret experiments

      and our labours of twenty years were in that cabinet. It is an

      irreparable loss to us and, I venture to say, to science. All the

      processes by which I had been able to arrive at the precious proof

      of the destructibility of matter were there--all. The man who came

      wished to take all from me,--my daughter and my work--my heart

      and my soul."

      And the great scientist wept like a child.

      We stood around him in silence, deeply affected by his great

      distress. Monsieur Darzac pressed closely to his side, and tried

      in vain to restrain his tears--a sight which, for the moment,

      almost made me like him, in spite of an instinctive repulsion which

      his strange demeanour and his inexplicable anxiety had inspired me.

      Monsieur Rouletabille alone,--as if his precious time and mission

      on earth did not permit him to dwell in the contemplation on human

      suffering--had, very calmly, stepped up to the empty cabinet and,

      pointing at it, broke the almost solemn silence. He entered into

      explanations, for which there was no need, as to why he had been led

      to believe that a robbery had been committed, which included the

      simultaneous discovery he had made in the lavatory, and the empty

      precious cabinet in the laboratory. The first thing that had struck

      him, he said, was the unusual form of that piece of furniture. It

      was very strongly built of fire-proof iron, clearly showing that it

      was intended for the keeping of most valuable objects. Then he

      noticed that the key had been left in the lock. "One does not

      ordinarily have a safe and leave it open!" he had said to himself.

      This little key, with its brass head and complicated wards, had

      strongly attracted him,--its presence had suggested robbery.

      Monsieur de Marquet appeared to be greatly perplexed, as if he did

      not know whether he ought to be glad of the new direction given to

      the inquiry by the young reporter, or sorry that it had not been

      done by himself. In our profession and for the general welfare, we

      have to put up with such mortifications and bury selfish feelings.

      That was why Monsieur de Marquet controlled himself and joined his

      compliments with those of Monsieur Dax. As for Monsieur Rouletabille,

      he simply shrugged his shoulders and said: "There's nothing at all

      in that!
    " I should have liked to box his ears, especially when he

      added: "You will do well, Monsieur, to ask Monsieur Stangerson who

      usually kept that key?"

      "My daughter," replied Monsieur Stangerson, "she was never without it.

      "Ah! then that changes the aspect of things which no longer

      corresponds with Monsieur Rouletabille's ideas!" cried Monsieur de

      Marquet. "If that key never left Mademoiselle Stangerson, the

      murderer must have waited for her in her room for the purpose of

      stealing it; and the robbery could not have been committed until

      after the attack had been made on her. But after the attack four

      persons were in the laboratory! I can't make it out!"

      "The robbery," said the reporter, "could only have been committed

      before the attack upon Mademoiselle Stangerson in her room. When

      the murderer entered the pavilion he already possessed the

      brass-headed key."

      "That is impossible," said Monsieur Stangerson in a low voice.

      "It is quite possible, Monsieur, as this proves."

      And the young rascal drew a copy of the "Epoque" from his pocket,

      dated the 21st of October (I recall the fact that the crime was

      committed on the night between the 24th and 25th), and showing us

      an advertisement, he read:

      "'Yesterday a black satin reticule was lost in the Grands Magasins

      de la Louvre. It contained, amongst other things, a small key with

      a brass head. A handsome reward will be given to the person who

      has found it. This person must write, poste restante, bureau 40, to

      this address: M. A. T. H. S. N.' Do not these letters suggest

      Mademoiselle Stangerson?" continued the reporter. "The 'key with

      a brass head'--is not this the key? I always read advertisements.

      In my business, as in yours, Monsieur, one should always read the

      personals.' They are often the keys to intrigues, that are not

      always brass-headed, but which are none the less interesting. This

      advertisement interested me specially; the woman of the key surrounded

      it with a kind of mystery. Evidently she valued the key, since she

      promised a big reward for its restoration! And I thought on these

      six letters: M. A. T. H. S. N. The first four at once pointed to

      a Christian name; evidently I said Math is Mathilde. But I could

      make nothing of the two last letters. So I threw the journal aside

      and occupied myself with other matters. Four days later, when the

      evening paper appeared with enormous head-lines announcing the murder

      of Mademoiselle Stangerson, the letters in the advertisement

      mechanically recurred to me. I had forgotten the two last letters,

      S. N. When I saw them again I could not help exclaiming,

      'Stangerson!' I jumped into a cab and rushed into the bureau No.

      40, asking: 'Have you a letter addressed to M. A. T. H. S. N.?'

      The clerk replied that he had not. I insisted, begged and entreated

      him to search. He wanted to know if I were playing a joke on him,

      and then told me that he had had a letter with the initials

      M. A. T. H. S. N, but he had given it up three days ago, to a lady

      who came for it. 'You come to-day to claim the letter, and the day

      before yesterday another gentleman claimed it! I've had enough of

      this,' he concluded angrily. I tried to question him as to the two

      persons who had already claimed the letter; but whether he wished

      to entrench himself behind professional secrecy,--he may have

      thought that he had already said too much,--or whether he was

      disgusted at the joke that had been played on him--he would not

      answer any of my questions."

      Rouletabille paused. We all remained silent. Each drew his own

      conclusions from the strange story of the poste restante letter.

      It seemed, indeed, that we now had a thread by means of which we

      should be able to follow up this extraordinary mystery.

      "Then it is almost certain," said Monsieur Stangerson, "that my

     


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