ia will not be surprised to learn that we did take a trip to Switzerland accordingl
on in the season; but they were overcome at last by the usual application of a golden key; and we found ourselve
incipient mania which shows itself in the form of an insane desire to climb mountain heights of disagreeable steepness and unnecessary snowiness, I will venture to assert we all enjoyed ourselves. We spe
ral excellent investments, or several deserving objects of Christian charity. It is my business in life, as his brother-in-law and secretary, to decline with thanks the excellent investments, and to throw judicious cold water on the objects of charity. Even I myself, as the great man's almoner, am very much sought after. People casually allude before me to artless stories of "poor curates in Cumberland, you
le d'h?te; she says she can't bear to be boxed up all day in private rooms with "too much family"-a sinister-looking man with dark hair and eyes, conspicuous by his bushy overhanging eyebrows. My attention was first called to the eyebrows in question by a nice little parson who sat at our side,
o you believe they're his own?" I asked of the curate; "or are they
Charles began, and ch
o say the truth, Vandrift had straightly enjoined on me long before to say nothing of our painful litt
e parson inquired, wit
give a queer sort of start. Charles's glance w
ered out, trying hard to look unconcerned. "A fellow t
ke a donkey, would
as Colonel Clay, the curate was obviously giving him the cue, and making it much more di
passing expression. But this is not the man. I
d, nodding hard and looking wise. Then he turned to his wife and made a
s and diverted attention for a moment. The magical name of Gladstone saved us. Sir Charles flar
son, the exclusive grantee of extensive concessions from the Brazilian Government on the Upper Amazons. He dived into conversation with me at once as to the splendid mineral resources of his Brazilian estate-the silver, the platinum, the actual rubies, the possible diamonds. I listened and smiled; I knew what was coming. All he needed to develop this magnificent concession was a littl
lf up; "but if I took a fancy to a fellow who had command of ready cash, I migh
f you," I answered drily, fi
rds with Sir Charles. His glance followed mine a
und to confess I never saw any man speak so well by movement al
a ruby absolutely sickens me. When Charles, in an unwonted fit of generosity, once gave his sister Isabel (whom I had the honour to marry) a ruby necklet (inferior stones), I made Isabel change it for sapphires and amethysts, on the judicious plea that they suited her comp
ference debentures of his bogus company, and a lien on the concession. I listened and smiled; I listened and yawned; I listened and was rude; I ceased to listen at all; but still he droned on with it. I fell asleep on the steamer one day, and woke up in ten minut
n they come across a young couple who are simple and natural, they delight in the purely human relation. We picnicked and went excursions a great deal with the honeymooners. They were so frank in their young love, and so proof against chaff, that we all really liked them. But whenever I called the pretty girl "White Heather," she looked
purpose to test him: these parsons are always trying to screw something out of one for their poor; men in my position know the truth of the saying that we have that class of the population always with us. Would you believe it, he says he hasn't any poor at all in his parish! They're all well-to-do farmers or else able-bodied labourers, and his one terror is that somebody will come and tr
want to get anything o
. I glanced at them, and saw at once they were a singular possession for so unobtrusive a person. They consisted each of a short gold bar for one arm of the link, fastened by a tiny chain of the same material to what seemed to my tolerably experienced eye-a first-rate diamond. Pretty big diamonds, too, and of remarkable shape, brilliancy, and cutting. In a moment I knew what Amelia meant. She owned a
e of good-humoured amusement. "Taken in another person, Dick, dear!" she exclaimed, in her
erved incautiously. (A most unwise a
est old-fashioned Oriental paste. My great-grandfather bought them, after the siege of Seringapatam, for a few rupees, from a Sepoy who had looted them from Tippoo Sultan's palace. He thought, like you, he had got a good thing. But it tur
so supposed to have come from Tippoo's collection. Both drew at once an identical conclusion. These were two of the
rles asked blandly. He spoke in
ince the siege, as a sort of valueless heirloom, for the sake of the picturesqueness of the story, you know; and nobody ever sees them without askin
him narrowly. He examined them close, first with the naked eye, then with the little pocket-lens which he always carries. "Adm
y were real gems of unusual value. I know Charles's way of doing business so well. His
es through them now, Dick," she cried. "I felt
at them that she meant to have them. And when Amelia means to have anything, people
beloved sister-in-law's. More perfect diamonds have seldom been seen. They have excited the universal admiration of thieves and connoisseurs. Amelia told me afterwards that, according to legend, a Sepoy stole the necklet at the sack of the palace, and then f
ality. Lady Vandrift has a necklet much the same in character, but composed of genuine stones; and as these are so much like
and buy me a brooch with the money! A pair of common links would do for yo
accent, that I couldn't imagine how Dick had th
you. My dear mother wore them, while she lived, as ear-rings; and as soon as she died I had them set as links in order that I might
on to believe a perfect new Kimberley will soon be discovered. If at any time you would care, Sir Charles, to look a
eyebrows as if he would devour him raw. Poor Dr. Hector Macpherson subsided instantly. We learnt a little later that he was a harmless lunatic, who went about the world with successive concessions for ruby mines and platinum reefs, because he had been ruined and driven mad by speculations in the two, and now recouped himself
sofa. "Charles," she broke out in the voice of a tragedy queen, "thos
all have them, Amelia. They're worth not less than th
. He cared more for his mother's gift and a family tradition than for a hundred pounds, if Sir Charles were to offer it. Charles's eye gleamed.
" the curate answered. "No, I
somewhat, and he looked
as too pr
nd my wife has set her heart on them. It's every man's duty to pl
otch girl cla
nk what fun we could have, and what good
sistible. But the c
r-rings! Uncle Aubrey would be so angry if he k
Uncle Aubrey?" Sir Charl
y, the darling old soul hasn't a penny to bless himself with, except his pension.
ncle Aubrey's feelings," S
ncle Aubrey! I wouldn't do anything for the wor
ia. "Well, have you
to sell them himself, but is afraid what 'Uncle Aubrey' would say about the matter. His wife will talk him ou
with me over arrears of correspondence. When we did come down the concierge stepped forward with a twisted little feminine note for Amelia. She took it and read it
ad it. Then he passed it on to
sday,
fever in Paris. I wanted to shake hands with you before we left-you have all been so sweet to us-but we go by the morning train, absurdly early, and I wouldn't for worlds disturb you. Perhaps so
those dear Wentworths, and a kiss for you
ere they've gone," Amelia ex
," Isabel suggested, lo
d at hi
Rev. Richard Peploe Brabazon, Holme B
etters might be sen
l further notice, H?tel des D
nd was made
ays' more stay at an expensive hotel, will probably upset the curate's budget. He'll be glad to sell now. You'll get them
o do?" Charles asked.
o. Seymour must start off at once, taking the night train to Paris; and the moment he gets there, he must interview the
dentical proposition. So the self-same evening saw me safe in the train on my way to Paris; and next morning I turned out of my comfortable sleeping-car at the Gare de Strasbourg. My order
told upon them after their long railway journey. They were pale and tired, Mrs. Brabazon, in particular, looking ill and worried-too much like White Heather. I was more than half ashamed of bothering them about the
ie begged and prayed; she had grown really attached to Lady Vandrift, she said; but the curate wouldn't hear of it. I went up tentatively to four hundred. He shook his head gloomily. It wasn't a question of money, he said. It was a question of affection. I saw it was no use trying that tack any longer. I struck out a new line. "These
and tested by half a dozen jewellers, and we know them to be paste. It wouldn't be right of m
e. But Lady Vandrift has an unconquerable and unaccountable desire to possess them. Money doesn't matter
ld be wrong," he said,-"I
ke all ris
As a clergyman," he answer
, Mrs. Brabaz
t hear what she said, but he seemed to give way at last. "I should love Lady Vandrift to have them," she murmured, t
uch?"
ogatively. It was a big rise, all at
plied. "Do y
ed up as if ash
, I should like you to give me a statement in writing that you buy them on my distinct and positive declaration that
ms into my purs
h his unerring business instinct, had anticipated the
ke a cheque?
esit
France would suit me
plied. "I will go
ple are! He allowed me to go o
shed it for notes of the Bank of France. The curate clasped them with pleasure. And right glad I was to go back to Luce
ion Amelia met me. She
ht them, Seymo
d, producing my
ng back. "Do you think they're real?
"No one can take me in, in the matter of d
ust like that-she's read of it in a book. A swindler has two sets-one real, one false; and he makes
ed," I answered. "I a
" Amelia murmured, "til
xamine. Her doubt was contagious. I half feared, myself, he might break out into a deep monosyllabic interjection, losing
ss than their value," he
ubt of their re
em. "They are genuine stones, precisely the s
stairs," she said slowly, "and bring down
athless. Amelia is far from slim, and I nev
ng has happened? Two of my own stones are gone. He's stolen a
too true. Two gems were missing-and t
hand to my head. "By Jove," I exclaim
e Heather-that innocent little Scotchwoman! I often detected a familiar ring in
ut, like the Commissary at Nice,
e man is," he said, "he has a method. He doesn't go out of his way to cheat us; he makes us go out of ours t
ar trick to draw us on by. If we had suspected him he could have shown the diamonds were real, and so escaped detection. It was a blind to draw us off from the fact of t
y jewel-case, though
Charles answered. "Yo
e whole rivière at once, an
Vandrift rivière, and seen pictures of the shape of them. They're marked gems, so to speak. No, he played a better game-took a couple of them off, and offered them to the only one person on earth who was likely to buy them without suspicion
n himself, and can appreciat
we only discovered much later. I will not here anticipate that disclosure. One thing a
the H?tel des Deux Mondes for parts unknown that same afternoon. And, as usual with Colonel Clay, they vanished into space, leaving no clue behind them. In other words, they changed their disguise, no doubt, and reappeared s
st him. As far as I can see, messieurs, there is not much to choose between you. You, Monsieur le Chevalier, desired to buy diamonds at the price of paste. You, madame, feared you had bought paste at th
o doubt, but by n
he will never again take me in, my dear Sey. I only hope he'll try it on. I should love to catch him. I'd know him another time, I'm sure,
d under the verandah of the Grand Hotel, in the big glass courtyard. And I veri
e beginning to sus