제목 : II. Arsene Lupin In Prison Page 07 of 12.작성자 : joker   

"Then, I must renounce my pictures! He has taken the gems of my collection. I would give a fortune to recover them. If there is no other way, let him name his own price."


Ganimard regarded the baron attentively, as he said:


"Now, that is sensible. Will you stick to it?"


"Yes, yes. But why?"


"An idea that I have."


"What is it?"


"We will discuss it later--if the official examination does not succeed. But, not one word about me, if you wish my assistance."


He added, between his teeth:


"It is true I have nothing to boast of in this affair."


The assistants were gradually regaining consciousness with the bewildered air of people who come out of an hypnotic sleep. They opened their eyes and looked about them in astonishment. Ganimard questioned them; they remembered nothing.


"But you must have seen some one?"


"No."


"Can't you remember?"


"No, no."


"Did you drink anything?"


They considered a moment, and then one of them replied:


"Yes, I drank a little water."


"Out of that carafe?"


"Yes."


"So did I," declared the other.


Ganimard smelled and tasted it. It had no particular taste and no odor.


"Come," he said, "we are wasting our time here. One can't decide an Arsene Lupin problem in five minutes. But, morbleau! I swear I will catch him again."


The same day, a charge of burglary was duly performed by Baron Cahorn against Arsene Lupin, a prisoner in the Prison de la Sante.


* * * * *


The baron afterwards regretted making the charge against Lupin when he saw his castle delivered over to the gendarmes, the procureur, the judge d'instruction, the newspaper reporters and photographers, and a throng of idle curiosity-seekers.


The affair soon became a topic of general discussion, and the name of Arsene Lupin excited the public imagination to such an extent that the newspapers filled their columns with the most fantastic stories of his exploits which found ready credence amongst their readers.


But the letter of Arsene Lupin that was published in the `Echo de France' (no once ever knew how the newspaper obtained it), that letter in which Baron Cahorn was impudently warned of the coming theft, caused considerable excitement. The most fabulous theories were advanced. Some recalled the existence of the famous subterranean tunnels, and that was the line of research pursued by the officers of the law, who searched the house from top to bottom, questioned every stone, studied the wainscoting and the chimneys, the window-frames and the girders in the ceilings. By the light of torches, they examined the immense cellars where the lords of Malaquis were wont to store their munitions and provisions. They sounded the rocky foundation to its very centre. But it was all in vain. They discovered no trace of a subterranean tunnel. No secret passage existed.


But the eager public declared that the pictures and furniture could not vanish like so many ghosts. They are substantial, material things and require doors and windows for their exits and their entrances, and so do the people that remove them. Who were those people? How did they gain access to the castle? And how did they leave it?

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