Page:Mystery of the Yellow Room (Grosset Dunlap 1908).djvu/311

 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!'

"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.'

"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