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<h2> CHAPTER XXVII. In Which Joseph Rouletabille Appears in All His Glory </h2>
<p>The excitement was extreme. Cries from fainting women were to be heard
amid the extraordinary bustle and stir. The "majesty of the law" was
utterly forgotten. The President tried in vain to make himself heard.
Rouletabille made his way forward with difficulty, but by dint of much
elbowing reached his manager and greeted him cordially. The letter was
passed to him and pocketing it he turned to the witness-box. He was
dressed exactly as on the day he left me even to the ulster over his arm.
Turning to the President, he said:</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, Monsieur President, but I have only just arrived from
America. The steamer was late. My name is Joseph Rouletabille!"</p>
<p>The silence which followed his stepping into the witness-box was broken by
laughter when his words were heard. Everybody seemed relieved and glad to
find him there, as if in the expectation of hearing the truth at last.</p>
<p>But the President was extremely incensed:</p>
<p>"So, you are Joseph Rouletabille," he replied; "well, young man, I'll
teach you what comes of making a farce of justice. By virtue of my
discretionary power, I hold you at the court's disposition."</p>
<p>"I ask nothing better, Monsieur President. I have come here for that
purpose. I humbly beg the court's pardon for the disturbance of which I
have been the innocent cause. I beg you to believe that nobody has a
greater respect for the court than I have. I came in as I could." He
smiled.</p>
<p>"Take him away!" ordered the President.</p>
<p>Maitre Henri Robert intervened. He began by apologising for the young man,
who, he said, was moved only by the best intentions. He made the President
understand that the evidence of a witness who had slept at the Glandier
during the whole of that eventful week could not be omitted, and the
present witness, moreover, had come to name the real murderer.</p>
<p>"Are you going to tell us who the murderer was?" asked the President,
somewhat convinced though still sceptical.</p>
<p>"I have come for that purpose, Monsieur President!" replied Rouletabille.</p>
<p>An attempt at applause was silenced by the usher.</p>
<p>"Joseph Rouletabille," said Maitre Henri Robert, "has not been regularly
subpoenaed as a witness, but I hope, Monsieur President, you will examine
him in virtue of your discretionary powers."</p>
<p>"Very well!" said the President, "we will question him. But we must
proceed in order."</p>
<p>The Advocate-General rose:</p>
<p>"It would, perhaps, be better," he said, "if the young man were to tell us
now whom he suspects."</p>
<p>The President nodded ironically:</p>
<p>"If the Advocate-General attaches importance to the deposition of Monsieur
Joseph Rouletabille, I see no reason why this witness should not give us
the name of the murderer."</p>
<p>A pin drop could have been heard. Rouletabille stood silent looking
sympathetically at Darzac, who, for the first time since the opening of
the trial, showed himself agitated.</p>
<p>"Well," cried the President, "we wait for the name of the murderer."
Rouletabille, feeling in his waistcoat pocket, drew his watch and, looking
at it, said:</p>
<p>"Monsieur President, I cannot name the murderer before half-past six
o'clock!"</p>
<p>Loud murmurs of disappointment filled the room. Some of the lawyers were
heard to say: "He's making fun of us!"</p>
<p>The President in a stern voice, said:</p>
<p>"This joke has gone far enough. You may retire, Monsieur, into the
witnesses' room. I hold you at our disposition."</p>
<p>Rouletabille protested.</p>
<p>"I assure you, Monsieur President," he cried in his sharp, clear voice,
"that when I do name the murderer you will understand why I could not
speak before half-past six. I assert this on my honour. I can, however,
give you now some explanation of the murder of the keeper. Monsieur
Frederic Larsan, who has seen me at work at the Glandier, can tell you
with what care I studied this case. I found myself compelled to differ
with him in arresting Monsieur Robert Darzac, who is innocent. Monsieur
Larsan knows of my good faith and knows that some importance may be
attached to my discoveries, which have often corroborated his own."</p>
<p>Frederic Larsan said:</p>
<p>"Monsieur President, it will be interesting to hear Monsieur Joseph
Rouletabille, especially as he differs from me."</p>
<p>A murmur of approbation greeted the detective's speech. He was a good
sportsman and accepted the challenge. The struggle between the two
promised to be exciting.</p>
<p>As the President remained silent, Frederic Larsan continued:</p>
<p>"We agree that the murderer of the keeper was the assailant of
Mademoiselle Stangerson; but as we are not agreed as to how the murderer
escaped, I am curious to hear Monsieur Rouletabille's explanation."</p>
<p>"I have no doubt you are," said my friend.</p>
<p>General laughter followed this remark. The President angrily declared that
if it was repeated, he would have the court cleared.</p>
<p>"Now, young man," said the President, "you have heard Monsieur Frederic
Larsan; how did the murderer get away from the court?"</p>
<p>Rouletabille looked at Madame Mathieu, who smiled back at him sadly.</p>
<p>"Since Madame Mathieu," he said, "has freely admitted her intimacy with
the keeper—"</p>
<p>"Why, it's the boy!" exclaimed Daddy Mathieu.</p>
<p>"Remove that man!" ordered the President.</p>
<p>Mathieu was removed from the court. Rouletabille went on:</p>
<p>"Since she has made this confession, I am free to tell you that she often
met the keeper at night on the first floor of the donjon, in the room
which was once an oratory. These meetings became more frequent when her
husband was laid up by his rheumatism. She gave him morphine to ease his
pain and to give herself more time for the meetings. Madame Mathieu came
to the chateau that night, enveloped in a large black shawl which served
also as a disguise. This was the phantom that disturbed Daddy Jacques. She
knew how to imitate the mewing of Mother Angenoux' cat and she would make
the cries to advise the keeper of her presence. The recent repairs of the
donjon did not interfere with their meetings in the keeper's old room, in
the donjon, since the new room assigned to him at the end of the right
wing was separated from the steward's room by a partition only.</p>
<p>"Previous to the tragedy in the courtyard Madame Mathieu and the keeper
left the donjon together. I learnt these facts from my examination of the
footmarks in the court the next morning. Bernier, the concierge, whom I
had stationed behind the donjon—as he will explain himself—could
not see what passed in the court. He did not reach the court until he
heard the revolver shots, and then he fired. When the woman parted from
the man she went towards the open gate of the court, while he returned to
his room.</p>
<p>"He had almost reached the door when the revolvers rang out. He had just
reached the corner when a shadow bounded by. Meanwhile, Madame Mathieu,
surprised by the revolver shots and by the entrance of people into the
court, crouched in the darkness. The court is a large one and, being near
the gate, she might easily have passed out unseen. But she remained and
saw the body being carried away. In great agony of mind she neared the
vestibule and saw the dead body of her lover on the stairs lit up by Daddy
Jacques' lantern. She then fled; and Daddy Jacques joined her.</p>
<p>"That same night, before the murder, Daddy Jacques had been awakened by
the cat's cry, and, looking through his window, had seen the black
phantom. Hastily dressing himself he went out and recognised her. He is an
old friend of Madame Mathieu, and when she saw him she had to tell him of
her relations with the keeper and begged his assistance. Daddy Jacques
took pity on her and accompanied her through the oak grove out of the
park, past the border of the lake to the road to Epinay. From there it was
but a very short distance to her home.</p>
<p>"Daddy Jacques returned to the chateau, and, seeing how important it was
for Madame Mathieu's presence at the chateau to remain unknown, he did all
he could to hide it. I appeal to Monsieur Larsan, who saw me, next
morning, examine the two sets of footprints."</p>
<p>Here Rouletabille turning towards Madame Mathieu, with a bow, said:</p>
<p>"The footprints of Madame bear a strange resemblance to the neat
footprints of the murderer."</p>
<p>Madame Mathieu trembled and looked at him with wide eyes as if in wonder
at what he would say next.</p>
<p>"Madame has a shapely foot, long and rather large for a woman. The
imprint, with its pointed toe, is very like that of the murderer's."</p>
<p>A movement in the court was repressed by Rouletabille. He held their
attention at once.</p>
<p>"I hasten to add," he went on, "that I attach no importance to this.
Outward signs like these are often liable to lead us into error, if we do
not reason rightly. Monsieur Robert Darzac's footprints are also like the
murderer's, and yet he is not the murderer!"</p>
<p>The President turning to Madame Mathieu asked:</p>
<p>"Is that in accordance with what you know occurred?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Monsieur President," she replied, "it is as if Monsieur Rouletabille
had been behind us."</p>
<p>"Did you see the murderer running towards the end of the right wing?"</p>
<p>"Yes, as clearly as I saw them afterwards carrying the keeper's body."</p>
<p>"What became of the murderer?—You were in the courtyard and could
easily have seen.</p>
<p>"I saw nothing of him, Monsieur President. It became quite dark just
then."</p>
<p>"Then Monsieur Rouletabille," said the President, "must explain how the
murderer made his escape."</p>
<p>Rouletabille continued:</p>
<p>"It was impossible for the murderer to escape by the way he had entered
the court without our seeing him; or if we couldn't see him we must
certainly have felt him, since the court is a very narrow one enclosed in
high iron railings."</p>
<p>"Then if the man was hemmed in that narrow square, how is it you did not
find him?—I have been asking you that for the last half hour."</p>
<p>"Monsieur President," replied Rouletabille, "I cannot answer that question
before half-past six!"</p>
<p>By this time the people in the court-room were beginning to believe in
this new witness. They were amused by his melodramatic action in thus
fixing the hour; but they seemed to have confidence in the outcome. As for
the President, it looked as if he also had made up his mind to take the
young man in the same way. He had certainly been impressed by
Rouletabille's explanation of Madame Mathieu's part.</p>
<p>"Well, Monsieur Rouletabille," he said, "as you say; but don't let us see
any more of you before half-past six."</p>
<p>Rouletabille bowed to the President, and made his way to the door of the
witnesses' room.</p>
<p>I quietly made my way through the crowd and left the court almost at the
same time as Rouletabille. He greeted me heartily, and looked happy.</p>
<p>"I'll not ask you, my dear fellow," I said, smiling, "what you've been
doing in America; because I've no doubt you'll say you can't tell me until
after half-past six."</p>
<p>"No, my dear Sainclair, I'll tell you right now why I went to America. I
went in search of the name of the other half of the murderer!"</p>
<p>"The name of the other half?"</p>
<p>"Exactly. When we last left the Glandier I knew there were two halves to
the murderer and the name of only one of them. I went to America for the
name of the other half."</p>
<p>I was too puzzled to answer. Just then we entered the witnesses' room, and
Rouletabille was immediately surrounded. He showed himself very friendly
to all except Arthur Rance to whom he exhibited a marked coldness of
manner. Frederic Larsan came in also. Rouletabille went up and shook him
heartily by the hand. His manner toward the detective showed that he had
got the better of the policeman. Larsan smiled and asked him what he had
been doing in America, Rouletabille began by telling him some anecdotes of
his voyage. They then turned aside together apparently with the object of
speaking confidentially. I, therefore, discreetly left them and, being
curious to hear the evidence, returned to my seat in the court-room where
the public plainly showed its lack of interest in what was going on in
their impatience for Rouletabille's return at the appointed time.</p>
<p>On the stroke of half-past six Joseph Rouletabille was again brought in.
It is impossible for me to picture the tense excitement which appeared on
every face, as he made his way to the bar. Darzac rose to his feet,
frightfully pale.</p>
<p>The President, addressing Rouletabille, said gravely:</p>
<p>"I will not ask you to take the oath, because you have not been regularly
summoned; but I trust there is no need to urge upon you the gravity of the
statement you are about to make."</p>
<p>Rouletabille looked the President quite calmly and steadily in the face,
and replied:</p>
<p>"Yes, Monsieur."</p>
<p>"At your last appearance here," said the President, "we had arrived at the
point where you were to tell us how the murderer escaped, and also his
name. Now, Monsieur Rouletabille, we await your explanation."</p>
<p>"Very well, Monsieur," began my friend amidst a profound silence. "I had
explained how it was impossible for the murderer to get away without being
seen. And yet he was there with us in the courtyard."</p>
<p>"And you did not see him? At least that is what the prosecution declares."</p>
<p>"No! We all of us saw him, Monsieur le President!" cried Rouletabille.</p>
<p>"Then why was he not arrested?"</p>
<p>"Because no one, besides myself, knew that he was the murderer. It would
have spoiled my plans to have had him arrested, and I had then no proof
other than my own reasoning. I was convinced we had the murderer before us
and that we were actually looking at him. I have now brought what I
consider the indisputable proof."</p>
<p>"Speak out, Monsieur! Tell us the murderer's name."</p>
<p>"You will find it on the list of names present in the court on the night
of the tragedy," replied Rouletabille.</p>
<p>The people present in the court-room began showing impatience. Some of
them even called for the name, and were silenced by the usher.</p>
<p>"The list includes Daddy Jacques, Bernier the concierge, and Mr. Arthur
Rance," said the President. "Do you accuse any of these?"</p>
<p>"No, Monsieur!"</p>
<p>"Then I do not understand what you are driving at. There was no other
person at the end of the court."</p>
<p>"Yes, Monsieur, there was, not at the end, but above the court, who was
leaning out of the window."</p>
<p>"Do you mean Frederic Larsan!" exclaimed the President.</p>
<p>"Yes! Frederic Larsan!" replied Rouletabille in a ringing tone. "Frederic
Larsan is the murderer!"</p>
<p>The court-room became immediately filled with loud and indignant protests.
So astonished was he that the President did not attempt to quiet it. The
quick silence which followed was broken by the distinctly whispered words
from the lips of Robert Darzac:</p>
<p>"It's impossible! He's mad!"</p>
<p>"You dare to accuse Frederic Larsan, Monsieur?" asked the President. "If
you are not mad, what are your proofs?"</p>
<p>"Proofs, Monsieur?—Do you want proofs? Well, here is one," cried
Rouletabille shrilly. "Let Frederic Larsan be called!"</p>
<p>"Usher, call Frederic Larsan."</p>
<p>The usher hurried to the side door, opened it, and disappeared. The door
remained open, while all eyes turned expectantly towards it. The clerk
re-appeared and, stepping forward, said:</p>
<p>"Monsieur President, Frederic Larsan is not here. He left at about four
o'clock and has not been seen since."</p>
<p>"That is my proof!" cried Rouletabille, triumphantly.</p>
<p>"Explain yourself?" demanded the President.</p>
<p>"My proof is Larsan's flight," said the young reporter. "He will not come
back. You will see no more of Frederic Larsan."</p>
<p>"Unless you are playing with the court, Monsieur, why did you not accuse
him when he was present? He would then have answered you."</p>
<p>"He could give no other answer than the one he has now given by his
flight."</p>
<p>"We cannot believe that Larsan has fled. There was no reason for his doing
so. Did he know you'd make this charge?"</p>
<p>"He did. I told him I would."</p>
<p>"Do you mean to say that knowing Larsan was the murderer you gave him the
opportunity to escape?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Monsieur President, I did," replied Rouletabille, proudly. "I am not
a policeman, I am a journalist; and my business is not to arrest people.
My business is in the service of truth, and is not that of an executioner.
If you are just, Monsieur, you will see that I am right. You can now
understand why I refrained until this hour to divulge the name. I gave
Larsan time to catch the 4:17 train for Paris, where he would know where
to hide himself, and leave no traces. You will not find Frederic Larsan,"
declared Rouletabille, fixing his eyes on Monsieur Robert Darzac. "He is
too cunning. He is a man who has always escaped you and whom you have long
searched for in vain. If he did not succeed in outwitting me, he can yet
easily outwit any police. This man who, four years ago, introduced himself
to the Surete, and became celebrated as Frederic Larsan, is notorious
under another name—a name well known to crime. Frederic Larsan,
Monsieur President, is Ballmeyer!"</p>
<p>"Ballmeyer!" cried the President.</p>
<p>"Ballmeyer!" exclaimed Robert Darzac, springing to his feet. "Ballmeyer!—It
was true, then!"</p>
<p>"Ah! Monsieur Darzac; you don't think I am mad, now!" cried Rouletabille.</p>
<p>Ballmeyer! Ballmeyer! No other word could be heard in the courtroom. The
President adjourned the hearing.</p>
<p>Those of my readers who may not have heard of Ballmeyer will wonder at the
excitement the name caused. And yet the doings of this remarkable criminal
form the subject-matter of the most dramatic narratives of the newspapers
and criminal records of the past twenty years. It had been reported that
he was dead, and thus had eluded the police as he had eluded them
throughout the whole of his career.</p>
<p>Ballmeyer was the best specimen of the high-class "gentleman swindler." He
was adept at sleight of hand tricks, and no bolder or more ruthless crook
ever lived. He was received in the best society, and was a member of some
of the most exclusive clubs. On many of his depredatory expeditions he had
not hesitated to use the knife and the mutton-bone. No difficulty stopped
him and no "operation" was too dangerous. He had been caught, but escaped
on the very morning of his trial, by throwing pepper into the eyes of the
guards who were conducting him to Court. It was known later that, in spite
of the keen hunt after him by the most expert of detectives, he had sat
that same evening at a first performance in the Theatre Francais, without
the slightest disguise.</p>
<p>He left France, later, to "work" America. The police there succeeded in
capturing him once, but the extraordinary man escaped the next day. It
would need a volume to recount the adventures of this master-criminal. And
yet this was the man Rouletabille had allowed to get away! Knowing all
about him and who he was, he afforded the criminal an opportunity for
another laugh at the society he had defied! I could not help admiring the
bold stroke of the young journalist, because I felt certain his motive had
been to protect both Mademoiselle Stangerson and rid Darzac of an enemy at
the same time.</p>
<p>The crowd had barely recovered from the effect of the astonishing
revelation when the hearing was resumed. The question in everybody's mind
was: Admitting that Larsan was the murderer, how did he get out of The
Yellow Room?</p>
<p>Rouletabille was immediately called to the bar and his examination
continued.</p>
<p>"You have told us," said the President, "that it was impossible to escape
from the end of the court. Since Larsan was leaning out of his window, he
had left the court. How did he do that?"</p>
<p>"He escaped by a most unusual way. He climbed the wall, sprang onto the
terrace, and, while we were engaged with the keeper's body, reached the
gallery by the window. He then had little else to do than to open the
window, get in and call out to us, as if he had just come from his own
room. To a man of Ballmeyer's strength all that was mere child's play. And
here, Monsieur, is the proof of what I say."</p>
<p>Rouletabille drew from his pocket a small packet, from which he produced a
strong iron peg.</p>
<p>"This, Monsieur," he said, "is a spike which perfectly fits a hole still
to be seen in the cornice supporting the terrace. Larsan, who thought and
prepared for everything in case of any emergency, had fixed this spike
into the cornice. All he had to do to make his escape good was to plant
one foot on a stone which is placed at the corner of the chateau, another
on this support, one hand on the cornice of the keeper's door and the
other on the terrace, and Larsan was clear of the ground. The rest was
easy. His acting after dinner as if he had been drugged was make believe.
He was not drugged; but he did drug me. Of course he had to make it appear
as if he also had been drugged so that no suspicion should fall on him for
my condition. Had I not been thus overpowered, Larsan would never have
entered Mademoiselle Stangerson's chamber that night, and the attack on
her would not have taken place."</p>
<p>A groan came from Darzac, who appeared to be unable to control his
suffering.</p>
<p>"You can understand," added Rouletabille, "that Larsan would feel himself
hampered from the fact that my room was so close to his, and from a
suspicion that I would be on the watch that night. Naturally, he could not
for a moment believe that I suspected him! But I might see him leaving his
room when he was about to go to Mademoiselle Stangerson. He waited till I
was asleep, and my friend Sainclair was busy trying to rouse me. Ten
minutes after that Mademoiselle was calling out, "Murder!"</p>
<p>"How did you come to suspect Larsan?" asked the President.</p>
<p>"My pure reason pointed to him. That was why I watched him. But I did not
foresee the drugging. He is very cunning. Yes, my pure reason pointed to
him; but I required tangible proof so that my eyes could see him as my
pure reason saw him."</p>
<p>"What do you mean by your pure reason?"</p>
<p>"That power of one's mind which admits of no disturbing elements to a
conclusion. The day following the incident of 'the inexplicable gallery,'
I felt myself losing control of it. I had allowed myself to be diverted by
fallacious evidence; but I recovered and again took hold of the right end.
I satisfied myself that the murderer could not have left the gallery,
either naturally or supernaturally. I narrowed the field of consideration
to that small circle, so to speak. The murderer could not be outside that
circle. Now who was in it? There was, first, the murderer. Then there were
Daddy Jacques, Monsieur Stangerson, Frederic Larsan, and myself. Five
persons in all, counting in the murderer. And yet, in the gallery, there
were but four. Now since it had been demonstrated to me that the fifth
could not have escaped, it was evident that one of the four present in the
gallery must be a double—he must be himself and the murderer also.
Why had I not seen this before? Simply because the phenomenon of the
double personality had not occurred before in this inquiry.</p>
<p>"Now who of the four persons in the gallery was both that person and the
assassin? I went over in my mind what I had seen. I had seen at one and
the same time, Monsieur Stangerson and the murderer, Daddy Jacques and the
murderer, myself and the murderer; so that the murderer, then, could not
be either Monsieur Stangerson, Daddy Jacques, or myself. Had I seen
Frederic Larsan and the murderer at the same time?—No!—Two
seconds had passed, during which I lost sight of the murderer; for, as I
have noted in my papers, he arrived two seconds before Monsieur
Stangerson, Daddy Jacques, and myself at the meeting-point of the two
galleries. That would have given Larsan time to go through the
'off-turning' gallery, snatch off his false beard, return, and hurry with
us as if, like us, in pursuit of the murderer. I was sure now I had got
hold of the right end in my reasoning. With Frederic Larsan was now always
associated, in my mind, the personality of the unknown of whom I was in
pursuit—the murderer, in other words.</p>
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