Page:Mystery of the Yellow Room (Grosset Dunlap 1908).djvu/251

 in bed. His clothes on the chair were wet through and his boots very muddy. He certainly did not get into that state in helping us to carry the body of the keeper. It was not raining then. Then his face showed extreme fatigue and he looked at us out of terror-stricken eyes.

"On our first questioning him he told us that he had gone to bed immediately after the doctor had arrived. On pressing him, however, for it was evident to us he was not speaking the truth, he confessed that he had been away from the château.  He explained his absence by saying that he had a headache and went out into the fresh air, but had gone no further than the oak grove.  When we then described to him the whole route he had followed, he sat up in bed trembling.

"'And you were not alone!' cried Larsan.

"'Did you see it then?' gasped Daddy Jacques.

"'What?' I asked.

"'The phantom—the black phantom!'

"Then he told us that for several nights he had seen what he kept calling the black phantom. It came into the park at the stroke of midnight and glided stealthily through the trees; it appeared to him to pass through the trunks of the trees.  Twice he had seen it from his window, by the light of the moon and had risen and followed the strange apparition.  The night before last he had almost overtaken it; but it had vanished at the corner of the donjon.  Last night, however, he had not left the château, his mind being disturbed by a presentiment that some new crime would be attempted.  Suddenly he saw the black