"You managed that very well, Mark," Dick said. "You kept well within
the limits of truth without bringing the real facts of the attack
upon us into the case."
"Well, you see, Dick, after working as a detective, one gets into
the way of telling stories with the smallest amount of deviation
possible from the truth. What will these fellows get done to them,
Lieutenant?"
"I should say that they will get two or three years imprisonment;
the only charge now is rioting and assault. It is lucky for them
that they had clubs instead of knives, for that would have brought
the matter under the head of attempted murder. The matter of the
gems was not important in the case, but there is sure to be a great
fuss and search for the missing Indians. I suppose you will soon
be off home now?"
"Yes, I shall find out tonight what vessel leaves for England
tomorrow, and take a berth in the first that sails for London. It
is too late to think of starting this evening, and indeed I feel
that I want a long night's rest, for I did not sleep much last
night, and have not quite recovered from that crack on my head."
On his return to the hotel Mark sent out a man to inquire at the
shipping offices, and finding that a bark would sail at nine o'clock
the next morning, they went down and took berths, and sailed in
her next day. The voyage home was a rapid one, for the wind blew
steadily from the east, and the vessel made the passage to the
mouth of the river in two days, and the next took them up to London.
"I will call round tomorrow or next day, Gibbons, with the checks
for you both," Mark said as he prepared to go ashore.
"No, sir. We are both of one mind that we could not take them. We
went over to prevent you being robbed of those sparklers, and to
see that you came to no harm. Well, the things are lost, and you
got knocked down and carried away. It is no thanks to us that you
are alive now. It is a mortifying job, that with two detectives to
watch over things and with us to fight we should have been fairly
beat by a few black niggers."
"If there had been any bungling on your part, Gibbons, there might
be something in what you say, but no one could have foreseen that
before we had been on shore two minutes we should have been attacked
in that way. You both did all that men could do, as was shown by
the condition of the fellows who were taken. I was just as much
separated from you as you were from me, and the fact that we were
surprised as we were is really due to my not determining to stay
on board until the morning, which I could no doubt have done with
the captain's permission. It never struck me for a moment that we
should be attacked in force. I thought it probable that an attempt
at assassination would be made, but it certainly did not seem
probable that it would be attempted while you were all with me.
You are not in the slightest degree to blame, for your part of the
agreement was carried out to my satisfaction. I shall certainly
carry out mine, as I have arrived home safe and sound."
"Well, governor, it is very good of you; but I tell you it will go
against the grain for us to take your money."
On landing, Mark parted with Dick Chetwynd, who had arranged to
drop Mark's bag at his lodgings on his way home, and at once took
a hackney coach to Islington. Millicent gave a cry of delight as
he entered the room.
"You are back earlier than I expected, Mark. You told me before
you started that the wind was in the east, and that you might be
a long time getting to Amsterdam unless it changed. I have been
watching the vane on the church, and it has been pointing east ever
since.
"Well, you have sold the diamonds, I hope?" she said, after the
first greeting was over.
"No; I have bad news for you, Millicent; the jewels have been
stolen."
"Well it does not make much difference, Mark. We have much more
than enough without them, so don't bother yourself in the least.
How did it happen?"
"Well, it is rather a long story. I will tell it you when Mrs.
Cunningham is here, so as not to have to go over it twice. How are
the dresses getting on?"
"I suppose they are getting on all right," she said. "I have done
nothing for the last two days but try them on. You see, we put them
out to three milliners, and they all three seem to reach the same
point together, and I start after breakfast, and it takes about two
hours at each place. You don't know what trouble you have given me
by hurrying things on so unreasonably."
"Well, it is better to have it all done and over," he said, "than
to have the thing hanging over you for a couple of months."
"That is what Mrs. Cunningham says. Now I want to hear about your
adventures, and I will call her down."
"Only think, Mrs. Cunningham," Millicent said presently, with a
laugh, after she had returned with her, "this silly boy has actually
let the diamonds be stolen from him."
"Yes, indeed. Fancy his not being fit to be trusted to look after
them! However, I tell him it is of no consequence. I don't know
how they went. He would not tell me the story until you came down."
"I am sorry to say it is true, Mrs. Cunningham, although I can
assure you that I really cannot blame myself for either carelessness
or stupidity. I knew when I started that there was a very great
risk, and took what seemed to me every possible precaution, for
in addition to Dick Chetwynd going with me, I took two detectives
from Bow Street and two prize fighters."
"And yet, in spite of all that, these things were stolen," Millicent
said. "How on earth did they do it? I should have sewn them up in
my pockets inside my dress."
"I sewed them up in the waistband of my trousers, Millicent, and
yet they managed, in spite of us, to steal them. And now I must
begin by telling you the whole history of those diamonds, and you
will understand why I thought it necessary to take a strong party
with me."
He then told them, repeating the history the Colonel had given his
father of the diamonds, and the conviction that he had, that he
had been followed by Hindoos, and the instructions he had given
for the disposal of the bracelet.
"As you know," he said, "nothing happened to confirm my uncle's
belief that there were men over here in search of the diamonds
during my father's life, but since then I have come to the same
conclusion that he had, and felt positive that I was being constantly
followed wherever I went. As soon as I heard where the treasure
was I began to take every precaution in my power. I avoided going
to the bank after my first visit there, and, as you know, would
not bring the things for you to look at. I got Dick Chetwynd to
go there, open the case, and take out these diamonds. He did not
bring them away with him, but fetched them from there the morning
we started. He went down and took the passage for us both at the
shipping office, and the pugilists and the detectives each took
passages for themselves, so that I hoped, however closely I was
followed, they would not learn that I was taking them to Amsterdam."
"It was very wrong, Mark; very wrong indeed," Millicent broke in.
"You had no right to run such a terrible risk; it would have been
better for you to have taken the diamonds and thrown them into the
Thames."
"That would not have improved matters," he said; "the Indians would
not have known that I had got rid of them, and would have continued
their efforts to find them, and I should always have been in danger
instead of getting it over once for all. However, I did not think
that there was any danger, going over as I did, with two of the
best prize fighters in England, to say nothing of the detectives,
who were the men who were with me when I caught Bastow. The only
danger was that I might be stabbed; but, as they would know, it
was no use their stabbing me unless they could search me quietly,
and that they could not do unless I was alone and in some lonely
neighborhood, and I had made up my mind not to stir out unless the
whole party were with me. I found out, when we got on board that
in spite of all the precautions I had taken, they had discovered
that I was going to sail for Amsterdam, which they could only have
done by following Dick as well as myself. There was a dark faced
foreign sailor, who, I had no doubt, was a Hindoo, already on board,
and I saw another in a boat watching us start; this was unpleasant,
but as I felt sure that they could not have known that I had with
me detectives and pugilists, I still felt that they would be able
to do nothing when I got to Amsterdam."
Then he told them the whole story of the attack, of his being carried
away, and of his unexpected release; of the search that had been
made for him and the arrest of eighteen of his assailants. Millicent
grew pale as he continued, and burst into tears when she heard of
his being a prisoner in the hands of the Hindoos.
"I shall never let you go out of my sight again, Mark!" she
exclaimed when he had finished. "It was bad enough before when you
were searching for that man here, and I used to be terribly anxious;
but that was nothing to this."
"Well, there is an end of it now, Millicent; the men have got the
diamonds, and will soon be on their way to India, if they have not
started already."
"Nasty things!" she said; "I shall never like diamonds again: they
will always remind me of the terrible danger that you have run. Isn't
it extraordinary that for twenty years four or five men should be
spending their lives waiting for a chance of getting them back!"
"I do not expect there were so many as that; probably there was
only one. He would have no difficulty in learning that my father
had not received any extraordinary gems from my uncle, and probably
supposed that they would not be taken out from wherever they might
be until you came of age. After the death of my father he might
suppose that I should take them out, or that, at any rate, I should
go to whoever had them, and see that they were all right, and he
then, perhaps, engaged half a dozen Lascars--there are plenty of
them at the docks--and had me watched wherever I went; and, do
you know, that I believe I once owed my life to them."
"Well, I was captured by some fellows who suspected me to be a Bow
Street runner, and I think that it would have gone very hard with
me if a party of five or six prize fighters had not broken into
the house, pretty nearly killed the men in whose hands I was,
and rescued me. They said that they had heard of my danger from a
foreign sailor who called at Gibbons', with whom I was in the habit
of boxing, and told him about it. You see, until they learned where
the jewels were, my life was valuable to them, for possibly I was
the only person who knew where they were hidden; so really I don't
think I have any reason for bearing a grudge against them. They saved
my life in the first place, and spared it at what was a distinct
risk to themselves. On the other hand, they were content with
regaining the bracelet, not even, as I told you, taking my watch
or purse. You see, with them it was a matter of religion. They had
no animosity against me personally, but I have no doubt they would
have stabbed me without the slightest compunction had there been no
other way of getting the things. Still, I think that I owe a debt
of gratitude to them rather than the reverse, and, after all, the
loss of the bracelet is not a serious one to us."
"I am glad it is gone," Millicent said. "You say it had already
caused the death of two men, and if you had succeeded in selling
it I can't help thinking that the money would have brought ill
fortune to us. I am heartily glad that the diamonds are gone, Mark.
I suppose they were very handsome?"
"They were magnificent," he said. "Dick and Cotter both agreed that
they had never seen their equal, and I fancy that they must have
been worth a great deal more than your father valued them at."
"Well, it does not matter at all. There is no history attached to
the others, I hope, Mark?"
"Not in any way, dear. They were bought, as the Colonel told my
father, in the ordinary course of things, and some, no doubt, were
obtained at the capture of some of the native princes' treasuries;
but it was solely on account of this bracelet that he had any anxiety.
You can wear all the others, if you have a fancy for keeping them,
without a shadow of risk."
"No, Mark, we will sell them every one. I don't think that I shall
ever care to wear any jewels again; and if I am ever presented at
court and have to do so, I would rather that you should buy some
new ones fresh from a jeweler's shop than wear anything that has
come from India."
"To-morrow you shall both go to the bank with me to see them, and
then I will take them to some first-class jeweler's and get him to
value them."
The visit was paid next day. Both Millicent and Mrs. Cunningham
were somewhat disappointed at the jewels.
"It is hardly fair to see them like this," Philip Cotter said.
"They would look very different if reset. No Indian jewels I have
ever seen show to advantage in their native settings; but many of
the stones are very large, and without knowing anything about them
I should say that they are worth the 50,000 pounds at which you say
Colonel Thorndyke valued them. He was not likely to be mistaken. He
was evidently a judge of these matters, and would hardly be likely
to be far wrong."
"We will go with you to the jeweler's, Mark," Millicent said. "In
the first place, I shall not feel quite comfortable until I know
that they are out of your hands, and in the next place I should
like to hear what he thinks of them."
"I have a number of Indian jewels that I wish you to value for me,"
Mark said, as, carrying the case, he entered the jeweler's shop.
"They were collected by Colonel Thorndyke, an uncle of mine, during
service in India."
The jeweler took them with him into a room behind the shop. The
case was opened, and the man took out sixty-eight small parcels it
contained, and opened them one after the other.
"I shall need a very careful examination of these before I can
form any estimate of their value," he said, after inspecting some
of the more important pieces of jewelry carefully. "They are a
most magnificent collection, and had they been properly cut in the
first place they would have been worth a very large sum. Unfortunately,
the Indian princes think more of size than of lustre, and have their
stones cut very much too flat to show off their full brilliancy.
Some of these large ones I should certainly advise to be recut, for
what they will lose in weight they will gain in beauty and value.
However, sir, I will go through them and give you an estimate of
the selling value of each piece. I need not say that they ought
all to be reset in the prevailing fashion; but the gold, which is
in some cases unnecessarily massive, will go some distance towards
defraying the expense."
"I should be glad if you can give me a week," the jeweler said.
"Some of the things, for instance that great pearl necklace, I could
appraise without much difficulty, but all the gems must be taken out
of their settings before I could form a fair idea of their value."
"Then I will call in a week's time," Mark said. "I am in no
particular hurry about them, but I would rather that they were in
your care than mine."
"Yes, if the cracksmen got word that there was such a collection
as this in any private house it would need a couple of men with
pistols to keep guard over them."
"I have the list ready for you, sir; you will see that they are
not marked according to their setting, but according to their size
and value. Thus, you see, the largest stones are priced separately;
the smaller ones are in groups according to their weight. The total
comes to 42,000 pounds. I do not know whether that at all equals
your expectations. I may say that I have shown the stones to two
or three of our principal diamond merchants, and that the prices
I have put down are those at which they would be willing to buy
them; possibly some would be worth more. I had the merchants here
together, and they spent some hours going through them, and the sums
put down are those at which one or other were willing to purchase."
"It quite answers my expectations," Mark said. "My uncle's estimate,
indeed, was somewhat higher, but doubtless he judged them at the
price which they would fetch in India. Well, sir, I authorize you
to close with the offers, and to dispose of them for me. I will
give you a written authority to do so. In the meantime, I wish to
buy a suite of jewels as a wedding present, a tiara, necklace, and
bracelets; but I do not want any diamonds to be among them."
"I am afraid I have nothing in stock without diamonds; of course,
I have both necklaces and bracelets of almost any stones that you
might select, but I have no complete set without diamonds; the
effect would be somber, and few ladies would like them."
"We have some unpleasant associations with diamonds," Mark said,
"and on that point I am quite determined; but if you used pearls
instead of diamonds the effect might be as good. I don't care
whether the stones are emeralds or rubies; at any rate, I should
like to see some, and then perhaps you might be able to make me a
set on the same model."
Several superb sets were brought in; Mark selected one of emeralds
and diamonds.
"That set is 6000 pounds, sir; the stones are exceptionally fine
ones; but if you substituted pearls of equal size for the diamonds,
it would cost considerably less; I could not give you the exact
price until it is made, but I should say that it would be about
4500 pounds."
"Very well, then, I will take that. How long will it be making?"
"I should not like to say less than three months at the earliest;
it will require some time to collect as fine a set of emeralds
as these. Indeed, I think that most probably I shall use these
emeralds, or the greater part of them, and collect others to take
their places at my leisure. I do not know whether the best plan
would not be to take the diamonds out and substitute pearls; there
would be no difficulty in getting them, and in that case I might
have it ready for you in a month."
"I think that will be the best plan; but you need not be in any
particular hurry about them. My marriage will take place in less
than a fortnight, and after that I shall probably be three or four
months before I return to London. I will get you to keep the things
until I come back."
"I have sold the jewels, Millicent," he said, when he returned to
Islington; "the jeweler has found purchasers for them all, and the
total comes to 42,000 pounds."
"I rather wonder myself, dear. However, there is one thing, there
are always plenty of people who will be glad to relieve us of
anything that we don't want. I can tell you that in the course of
my search for Bastow I have seen an amount of poverty and misery such
as I never dreamt of, and I certainly should like to do something
to relieve it. The best thing that I know of would be to give a
handsome sum to three or four of the great hospitals. I don't know
of any better means of helping the very poor."
"Suppose, Mark," the girl said, putting her hand on his arm, "we
give this 42,000 pounds as a thank offering. We never expected
to get it, and my father's jewels have nearly cost you your life.
We have such an abundance without that, I should like, above all
things, to give this money away."
"I think that is an excellent plan, Millicent, and a very happy
thought on your part. We cannot do it now, as we have not yet got
the money, but as soon as we do we will send off checks for 10,000
guineas each to St. Bartholomew's, Guy's, and St. Thomas'--those
are the three principal ones; the others we can settle afterwards.
But I should say that the Foundling would be as good as any, and I
believe that they are rather short of funds at present; then there
is the London Mendicity Society, and many other good charities.
Perhaps it would be better to divide the whole among eight of them
instead of four; but we need not settle that until we return."
"Do you think we shall have to go to this horrid Amsterdam, Mark?"
"I hope not, dear; but I shall no doubt hear from the Lieutenant
of the watch during the next week or ten days."
When the letter came it was satisfactory. The prisoners, seeing
the hopelessness of any defense, had all admitted their guilt, and
the name of the man who had dealt with them had also been given up.
Except in his case there would be no trial. The others would have
sentences passed on them at once, and three, who had been promised
comparatively slight punishment, would go into the box to give
evidence against the man who had engaged them. Before starting for
Holland Mark had consulted Millicent as to whether she would prefer
being married in London or at Crowswood. She had replied:
"I should greatly prefer Crowswood, Mark. Here we know no one,
there we should be among all our friends; certainly if we don't
go we must get Mr. Greg to come up and marry us here. I am sure
he would feel very disappointed if anyone else were asked. At the
same time I should not like to go home. When we come back from our
trip it will be different; but it would be a great trial now, and
however happy we might be, I should feel there was a gloom over
the house."
"I quite agree with you, Millicent. When we come back we can see
about entirely refurnishing it, and, perhaps, adding some rooms to
it, and we need not go down until a complete change has been made.
We shall be able to manage it somehow or other, and I quite agree
with you that anything will be better than going back to the house
for a day or two before the wedding."
On the voyage back from Holland Mark had talked the matter over
with Dick Chetwynd, and said that he thought of taking rooms for
Mrs. Cunningham and Millicent at Reigate, and stopping at the hotel
himself, and having the wedding breakfast there.
"I should think so," Dick laughed. "Why, if you had asked anyone
else I should have made a personal matter of it with him, and have
given him the option of resigning the position or going out with
me. But your other plans are foolish, and I shall take the matter
into my own hands; I shall insist upon the two ladies coming down
to the Park, and I will get my aunt to come and preside generally
over things. I shall fill up the house with bridesmaids, and shall
have a dance the evening before. You can put up at the hotel if you
like, but you know very well that there are a dozen houses where
they will be delighted to have you; there is no doubt that when
they know what is coming off you will get a dozen invitations, and
then after church all those invited will drive off to the Park to
the wedding breakfast. After that is over you can start in a post
chaise to Canterbury or Dover, wherever you may decide to make your
first halt."
"But, my dear Dick, I could not put you to all this trouble!"
"Nonsense, man. I should enjoy it immensely; besides, I shall be
really glad of a good reason to try and open the doors of the Park
again. I have been there very little since my father's death, and
I think I shall make it my headquarters in future. I am getting
rather tired of bachelor life in London, and must look out for a
wife; so nothing could be more appropriate than this idea. Don't
bother yourself any further about it. I shall ride down and establish
myself there tomorrow, and spend a couple of days in driving round
to our friends and in sending out invitations. I shall still have
nearly a fortnight for making all preparations. Why, it will cause
quite an excitement in the neighborhood! I shall be hailed as a
benefactor, and I shall let everyone know that your father's ward
was really your cousin, but that by the will of her father she
was to drop her surname until she came of age; and that until that
time your father was to have the entire control of the property. I
shall add that although the estate, of course, is hers, your uncle
has left you a very big fortune, and that nothing could be more
suitable in all respects than the marriage."
"That will do excellently, Dick; that will be quite enough, without
going into details at all. You can mention that we intend to have
the house entirely refurnished, and on the return from our wedding
trip abroad to settle there. I am sure I am extremely obliged to
you for your offer, which will certainly clear away all sorts of
small difficulties."
A day or two after his return Mark wrote to Mr. Greg telling him
the relations in which Millicent and he stood to each other, and of
the near approach of their marriage. He said that Millicent would
be married from Dick Chetwynd's, but that it would be at Crowswood
church. In return he received a warm letter of congratulation
from the Rector, telling him that the news was in every respect
delightful, and that his wife and the children were in a state
of the highest excitement, not only at the marriage, but at their
coming down to reside again at Crowswood.
"The village," he said, "will be scarcely less pleased than I
am, for though everything goes on as you ordered, and the people
get their milk, broths, and jellies as before, they don't look at
it as the same thing as it was in the old days. I cannot say that
the news of your engagement to Miss Conyers--I ought to say Miss
Thorndyke--is surprising, for I had thought that it would be
quite the natural thing for you to fall in love with each other,
and, indeed, my wife declares that she saw it coming on distinctly
during the last few months before you left here. Your postscript
saying that Bastow had been captured and had committed suicide gave
me a distinct feeling of relief, for no one could tell whether the
deadly enmity that he felt for your father might not extend to you.
I have cut this note rather short, but I have just heard the door
shut, and I am quite sure that my wife has gone down to tell the good
news in the village, and I really cannot deny myself the pleasure
of telling some of the people myself, and seeing their faces brighten
up at the news."
As Dick had foretold would be the case, Mark received a very
warm letter from Sir Charles Harris, congratulating him upon his
approaching marriage, and insisting upon his taking up his quarters
with him.
"I am sending a man down with this to hand it to the guard as the
up coach goes through the town. Chetwynd told me that his call on
me was the first he had paid, so I feel fairly confident that I
shall forestall the rest of your friends, and that you will give
me the pleasure of your company."
Mark wrote back accepting the invitation at once, which enabled
him to decline half a dozen others without the necessity of making
a choice. Everything turned out as arranged. Millicent and Mrs.
Cunningham went down in a post chaise, two days before the wedding,
and Mark drove down in his gig with them. Dick Chetwynd met them
on horseback just outside Reigate, and escorted the ladies to his
house, Mark driving on to that of Sir Charles Harris. Millicent
found the house full of her special friends, whom she had asked
to be her bridesmaids. She was almost bewildered by the warmth of
their welcome, and overpowered by the questions poured upon her.
"The news quite took all our breath away, Millicent," one of
them said. "It seems extraordinary that you should have been Miss
Thorndyke all the time, though I don't think that any of us were
at all surprised that you should take the name now; you must have
been surprised when you heard that you were the heiress of Crowswood."
"I was a great deal more disgusted than surprised," she said rather
indignantly. "I did not think that it was fair at all that I should
step into Mark's shoes."
"Well, it has all come right now, Millicent, and I dare say you
thought that it would, even then."
"I can assure you that I did not; quite the contrary, I thought
that it never would come right. I was very unhappy about it for a
time."
"Now, young ladies," Dick Chetwynd laughed, "will you please take
Mrs. Cunningham and Miss Thorndyke up to their rooms? I don't
suppose I shall see any more of you before dinner time; there are
those trunks to be opened and examined, talked over, and admired.
Mind, I have fifteen more, for the most part men, coming to dinner,
so those of you who aspire to follow Miss Thorndyke's example had
best prepare yourselves for conquest."
The ball on the following evening was a great success. Dick
had determined that it should be a memorable one, and there was a
consensus of opinion that it was the most brilliant that had taken
place in that part of the country for many years.
Crowswood church and village presented a most festive appearance
on the following day; there was not a cottage that had not great
posies of flowers in its windows, and that had not made some sort
of attempt at decoration with flags or flowers. A huge arch of
evergreens, with sheaves of wheat and flowers, had been erected on
the top of the hill, and every man, woman, and child turned out in
their best, and cheered lustily, first, when Mark drove up in his
gig, and equally lustily when the Chetwynd carriage, drawn by four
gray horses, dashed up, preceded by a large number of others with
the bridesmaids and friends. The church was already crowded, and
Mr. Greg was visibly moved at seeing the son and niece of the man
to whom he owed his living made man and wife. When the wedding
breakfast, at which more than fifty sat down, and the necessary
toasts were over, Mr. and Mrs. Thorndyke started for Canterbury.