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"Remember, forty years have elapsed."
"I would recognize you if a thousand years had elapsed. You appear to me to-day just as you looked forty years ago. I was a young man then; I have grown old, but you do not appear to have aged at all."
"And you are prepared to surrender the fortune?"
"I am."
"I only have to say, sir, that I can prove how easy it is for a man to be deceived."
With the above words, Gil Alvarez cast aside his disguise and stood revealed, presenting his wonderful resemblance to his twin brother.
Mr. Townsend recoiled in greater amazement than he did while under the first belief that he had been confronted by a visitant from the grave. A few seconds he gazed and then said:
"Wait."
He stepped to a sideboard, drank a gla.s.s of brandy, and then resuming his former seat, said in a perfectly cool tone:
"This is a very remarkable piece of acting, Mr. Alvarez. Who is this person?"
"My twin brother and my aid."
"And what does this all mean?"
"It is a test of identification."
"You are a wonderful man."
"I am?"
"Yes."
"How?"
"In being able from memory and imagination to create such a wonderful resemblance. You have the clothes and appearance of the man who visited me counterfeited to perfection. How you could have had those clothes made is a mystery to me; I am dumfounded. No wonder you asked me if I was sound of heart; otherwise you would have killed me."
"And the counterfeit was perfect?"
"Yes."
"The identification would have been perfect?"
"Yes."
"Well, sir, I have a remarkable disclosure to make."
"I cannot be more surprised than I have been. I tell you your dummy is perfect."
"Then permit me to inform you that the apparition was not all acting.
Those are the clothes worn by the man on the day he visited you and deposited the fortune with you--yes, sir, the very clothes the strange man wore on that occasion."
"Then, sir, I will admit that you have a wonderful disclosure to make."
"Yes, sir, I have."
CHAPTER VI.
ON A NEW "LAY"--DOWN IN MONMOUTH COUNTY--AN APPARENT DEFEAT--A SINGULAR CLUE--TWO COINCIDENT DATES--OLD BERWICK--STRIKING SUGGESTIONS--ONCE AGAIN A CHANCE.
After what had occurred Mr. Townsend was prepared for anything. He had regained his self-possession. He was a brave, nervy old gentleman; his bravery was like that which always attends honesty.
"Please do not keep me in suspense."
"I have said those are the clothes worn by the strange man who visited you forty years ago?"
"Yes."
"And you have not seen or heard from him since?"
"I have not."
"It is not strange."
"You can explain why?"
"I can."
"Within three hours after his visit to you he was a dead man."
"A dead man?"
"Yes."
"Did he commit suicide?"
"It is possible he did, not probable."
"Explain."
Our hero proceeded and told all the thrilling incidents of his phenomenal "shadow," and proceeding said:
"I have proved the ident.i.ty of the man now beyond all question."
"You have; but what was his name?"
"That I have not learned; I will in time; but I have learned one fact: he came from Monmouth County, New Jersey. That is what he was trying to say when his heart ceased its throbbings. It is not strange that Mr.