her love for him.  He stabbed her in his anger, determined to convict
   Darzac of the crime.  As Larsan he could do it, and had so managed
   things that Darzac could never explain how he had employed the time
   of his absence from the chateau.  Ballmeyer's precautions were most
   cunningly taken.
   Larsan had threatened Darzac as he had threatened Mathilde--with
   the same weapon, and the same threats.  He wrote Darzac urgent
   letters, declaring himself ready to deliver up the letters that had
   passed between him and his wife, and to leave them for ever, if he
   would pay him his price.  He asked Darzac to meet him for the
   purpose of arranging the matter, appointing the time when Larsan
   would be with Mademoiselle Stangerson.  When Darzac went to Epinay,
   expecting to find Ballmeyer or Larsan there, he was met by an
   accomplice of Larsan's, and kept waiting until such time as the
   "coincidence" could be established.
   It was all done with Machiavellian cunning; but Ballmeyer had
   reckoned without Joseph Rouletabille.
   Now that the Mystery of The Yellow Room has been cleared up, this
   is not the time to tell of Rouletabille's adventures in America.
   Knowing the young reporter as we do, we can understand with what
   acumen he had traced, step by step, the story of Mathilde Stangerson
   and Jean Roussel.  At Philadelphia he had quickly informed himself
   as to Arthur William Rance.  There he learned of Rance's act of
   devotion and the reward he thought himself entitled to for it.  A
   rumour of his marriage with Mademoiselle Stangerson had once found
   its way into the drawing-rooms of Philadelphia.  He also learned of
   Rance's continued attentions to her and his importunities for her
   hand.  He had taken to drink, he had said, to drown his grief at
   his unrequited love.  It can now be understood why Rouletabille
   had shown so marked a coolness of demeanour towards Rance when they
   met in the witnesses' room, on the day of the trial.
   The strange Roussel-Stangerson mystery had now been laid bare.  Who
   was this Jean Roussel?  Rouletabille had traced him from Philadelphia
   to Cincinnati.  In Cincinnati he became acquainted with the old aunt,
   and had found means to open her mouth.  The story of Ballmeyer's
   arrest threw the right light on the whole story.  He visited the
   "presbytery"--a small and pretty dwelling in the old colonial style
   --which had, indeed, "lost nothing of its charm."  Then, abandoning
   his pursuit of traces of Mademoiselle Stangerson, he took up those
   of Ballmeyer.  He followed them from prison to prison, from crime
   to crime.  Finally, as he was about leaving for Europe, he learned
   in New York that Ballmeyer had, five years before, embarked for
   France with some valuable papers belonging to a merchant of New
   Orleans whom he had murdered.
   And yet the whole of this mystery has not been revealed.
   Mademoiselle Stangerson had a child, by her husband,--a son.  The
   infant was born in the old aunt's house.  No one knew of it, so
   well had the aunt managed to conceal the event.
   What became of that son?--That is another story which, so far, I
   am not permitted to relate.
   About two months after these events, I came upon Rouletabille sitting
   on a bench in the Palais de Justice, looking very depressed.
   "What's the matter, old man?" I asked.  "You are looking very down.
   cast.  How are your friends getting on?"
   "Apart from you," he said, "I have no friends."
   "I hope that Monsieur Darzac--"
   "No doubt."
   "And Mademoiselle Stangerson--How is she?"
   "Better--much better."
   "Then you ought not to be sad."
   "I am sad," he said, "because I am thinking of the perfume of the
   lady in black--"
   "The perfume of the lady in black!--I have heard you often refer
   to it.  Tell me why it troubles you."
   "Perhaps--some day; some day," said Rouletabille.
   And he heaved a profound sigh.
   End of Project Gutenberg's The Mystery of the Yellow Room, by Gaston Leroux
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