Page:Mystery of the Yellow Room (Grosset Dunlap 1908).djvu/313

 covering the signs of a slight healing wound. Had we taken a quicker initiative at the time Larsan told us that lie about the cane, I am certain he would have gone off, to avoid suspicion. All the same, we worried Larsan or Ballmeyer without our knowing it."

"But," I interrupted, "if Larsan had no intention of using the cane as evidence against Darzac, why had he made himself up to look like the man when he went in to buy it?"

"He had not specially 'made up' as Darzac to buy the cane; he had come straight to Cassette's immediately after he had attacked Mademoiselle Stangerson. His wound was troubling him and, as he was passing along the Avenue de l'Opera, the idea of the cane came to his mind and he acted on it.  It was then eight o'clock.  And I, who had hit upon the very hour of the occurrence of the tragedy, almost convinced that Darzac was not the criminal, and knowing of the cane, I still never suspected Larsan.  There are times . . ."

"There are times," I said, "when the greatest intellects . . ." Rouletabille shut my mouth. I still continued to jokejoke with [sic] him, but, finding he did not reply, I saw he was no longer paying any attention to what I was saying. I found he was fast asleep.