Page:Mystery of the Yellow Room (Grosset Dunlap 1908).djvu/165

 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!"

"Impossible!" I cried, "What could be more mysterious than that?"

"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 fiancé.  The marks made by the bicycle may have been made by his bicycle.  He had usually left it at the château; why did he take it to Paris on that particular occasion?  Was it because he was not going to return again to the château?  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.

"Frédéric 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 Elysée, the Sorbonne professor and Mademoiselle Stangerson did not see one another; but they may have written to each other.