It was not until Easter that Mark Thorndyke and his wife returned to
England. They had spent the greater portion of that time in Italy,
lingering for a month at Venice, and had then journeyed quietly
homewards through Bavaria and Saxony; They were in no hurry, as
before starting on their honeymoon Mark had consulted an architect,
had told him exactly what he wanted, and had left the matter in
his hands. Mrs. Cunningham had from time to time kept them informed
how things were going on. The part of the house in which the Squire's
room had been situated was entirely pulled down, and a new wing
built in its stead. Millicent had been specially wishful that this
should be done.
"I don't know that I am superstitious, Mark," she had said, "but
I do think that when a murder has taken place in a house it is
better to make a complete change. The servants always think they
see or hear something. That part of the house is avoided, and it
is difficult to get anyone to stay there. I think it is very much
more important to do that than it is to get the house refurnished;
we can do anything in that way you like when we get back, but I
should certainly like very much to have the great alteration made
before we return."
The architect was a clever one, and the house, which was some two
hundred years old, was greatly improved in appearance by the new wing,
which was made to harmonize well with the rest, but was specially
designed to give as much variety as possible to the general outline.
Millicent uttered an exclamation of pleasure when they first caught
a glimpse of the house. As they rode through the village they were
again welcomed as heartily as they were on their wedding day. Mrs.
Cunningham received them; she had been established there for a
month, and had placed the house entirely on its old footing. They
first examined the new portion of the house, and Millicent was
greatly pleased with the rooms that had been prepared for them,
Mark having requested Mrs. Cunningham to put the furnishing into
the hands of the best known firm of the day.
"I have asked," Mrs. Cunningham said, "the Rector and his wife and
Mr. Chetwynd to dine with us this evening; they can scarcely be
termed company, and I thought that you might find it pleasant to
have these old friends here the first evening. There is a letter for
you on the library table, Mark; it may almost be called a packet;
it has been here nearly a month."
In our days a newly married couple would find on their return from
foreign travel basketfuls of letters, circulars, and catalogues
from tradesmen of all kinds; happily, our forefathers were saved
from these inflictions, and Mark at once went to the library with
almost a feeling of surprise as to who could have written to him.
He saw at once that it was a ship's letter, for on the top was
written, "Favored by the Surinam."
"Why, it is Ramoo's writing. I suppose he gave it to someone he
knew, and that instead of its being put in the mail bag in India,
he brought it on with him. What a tremendously long epistle!" he
exclaimed, glancing his eye down the first page, and then a puzzled
expression came across his face; he sat down and began to read from
the first slowly and carefully.
"I do not know why I should write to tell you the true history of
all these matters. I have thought it over many times, but I feel
that it is right that you should know clearly what has happened,
and how it has come about, and more especially that you should
know that you need never fear any troubles such as those that have
taken place. I am beginning to write this while we are yet sailing,
and shall send it to you by ship from the Cape, or if it chances
that we meet any ship on her way to England, our letters may be
put on board her."
"Why, this letter must be more than a year old," Mark said to himself.
There was no date to the letter, but, turning to the last sheet, he
saw as a postscript after the signature the words, "January 26th.
--A ship, the Surinam, is lying a short distance from us, and will
take our letters to England."
"Yes, it must be a year old; but what he means by the way he begins
is more than I can imagine;" and he turned back to the point at
which he had broken off.
"I would tell it you in order as it happened. I, Ramoo, am a Brahmin.
Twenty years ago I was the head priest of a great temple. I shall
not say where the temple was; it matters not in any way. There was
fighting, as there is always fighting in India. There were Company's
Sepoys and white troops, and one night the most sacred bracelet of
the great god of our temple was stolen."
"Good Heavens!" Mark exclaimed, laying down the letter. "Then it has
been Ramoo who has all this time been in pursuit of the diamonds;
and to think that my uncle never even suspected him!"
Then suddenly he continued, "now I understand why it was my life
was spared by those fellows. By Jove, this is astounding!" Then he
took up the letter again.
"Two of the Brahmins under me had observed, at a festival the day
before the bracelet was lost, a white soldier staring at it with
covetous eyes. One of them was in charge of the temple on the
night when it was stolen, and on the day following he came to me,
and said, 'I desire to devote my life to the recovery of the jewels
of the god. Bondah will go with me; we will return no more until we
bring them back.' 'It is good,' I said; 'the god must be appeased,
or terrible misfortunes may happen.' Then we held a solemn service
in the temple. The two men removed the caste marks from their
foreheads, prostrated themselves before the god, and went out from
amongst us as outcasts until the day of their death. Two months
later a messenger came from the one who had spoken to me, saying that
they had found the man, but had for a long time had no opportunity
of finding the bracelet. Then Bondah had met him in a lonely place,
and had attacked him. Bondah had lost his life, but the soldier
was, though sorely wounded, able to get back to his regiment. He
had died, but he had, the writer was convinced, passed the jewels
on to a comrade, whom he would watch. Then I saw that one man was
not sufficient for such a task. Then I, too, the Chief Brahmin of
the temple, saw that it was my duty to go forth also.
"I laid the matter before the others, and they said, 'You are right;
it is you who, as the chief in the service of the god, should bring
back his jewels.' So again there was a service, and I went forth
as an outcast and a wanderer, knowing that I must do many things
that were forbidden to my caste; that I must touch unclean things,
must eat forbidden food, and must take life if needs be. You, sahib,
cannot understand how terrible was the degradation to me, who was
of the purest blood of the Brahmins. I had taken the most solemn
vows to devote my life to this. I knew that, whether successful or
not, although I might be forgiven my offense by the god, yet that
never again could I recover my caste, even though the heaviest
penances were performed. Henceforth, I must stand alone in the
world, without kindred, without friends, without help, save such
as the god might give me in the search.
"I was rich. The greater part of my goods I gave to the temple, and
yet retained a considerable sum, for I should need money to carry
out my quest, and after I had accomplished it I should hand over
what remained for the benefit of the poor. I should myself become
a fakir. I want you to understand, sahib, that henceforth I had but
one object in life, a supreme one, to accomplish, in which nothing
must stand in my way, and that what would be in others a crime was
but a sacrifice on my part, most acceptable to the god. I journeyed
down to the place where my comrade was, dressed as one of the lowest
class, even as a sweeper, and he and I strove by all the means in
our power to discover what this man had done with the jewels. Night
after night we crawled into his tent. We searched his bed and his
clothes. With sharp rods we tried every inch of the soil, believing
that he had hidden the diamonds underground, but we failed.
"There my comrade said, 'I must give my life to find out where he
hides these things. I will watch night after night by the door of
his tent, and if he comes out I will stab him; it shall be a mortal
wound, but I will not kill him outright. Before he dies he will
doubtless, as the other did, pass the jewels on to some comrade,
and then it will be for you to follow him up.' 'It is good,' I said.
'This man may have hidden them away somewhere during the time they
have marched through the country. In spite of the watch you have
kept he may have said to himself, "I will return, though it be
years hence." Your plan is good,' I said. 'I envy you. 'Tis better
to die thus than to live in sin as we are doing.'
"That evening the man was stabbed, but an officer running up killed
my comrade. The soldier was taken to the hospital, and I lay down
beside the tent with my eye to a slit that I had cut, and watched
till morning.
"Then I took my broom and swept the ground. I had not been hired as
one of the camp sweepers, and so could move about and sweep where
I chose. No one ever asked me any questions. The soldiers heeded
me no more than if I had been a dog, and, of course, supposed that
I was acting by the order of the head of the sweepers. Presently
I saw one of the servants of the hospital go across to the tent of
the officer who had killed my comrade. He came over and went into
the hospital tent. I felt sure that it was the wounded man who had
sent for him. He was in there some time. Presently a soldier came
out and went to the tent of the wounded man, and returned bringing
a musket. Then I said to myself, 'The god has blinded us. He wills
that we shall go through many more toils before we regain the
bracelet.' Doubtless the man had carried the bracelet in his musket
all the time, and we, blind that we were, had never thought of it.
"Presently the officer came out again. I noticed that as he did so
he looked round on all sides as if to see if he were watched. Then
I knew that it was as I had thought: the soldier had given the
bracelet to him. At this I was pleased; it would be far more easy
to search the tent of an officer than of a soldier, who sleeps
surrounded by his comrades. I thought that there was no hurry now;
it would need but patience, and I should be sure to find them.
I had not calculated that he would have better opportunities than
the soldier for going about, and that, doubtless, the soldier had
warned him of his danger. Two hours later the officer mounted his
horse and rode towards the camp of another regiment, a mile and
a quarter away. There was nothing in that; but I watched for his
return all that day and all that night, and when he did not come
back, I felt that he was doing something to get rid of the diamonds.
"He was away three days, and when he returned I was almost sure
that he had not the diamonds about him. As he had ridden off he
had looked about just as he had when he left the hospital: he was
uneasy, just as if he was watched; now he was uneasy no longer.
Then I knew that my search would be a long one, and might fail
altogether. I went away, and for three months I prayed and fasted;
then I returned. I bought different clothes, I painted my forehead
with another caste mark, then I bought from the servant of an
officer in another regiment his papers of service: recommendations
from former masters. Then I went to the officer--you will guess,
sahib, that it was the Major, your uncle--and I paid his servant
to leave his service, and to present me as a brother of his who
had been accustomed to serve white sahibs, and was, like himself,
a good servant; so I took his place.
"He was a good master, and I came to love him, though I knew that I
might yet have to kill him. You have heard that I saved his life
three times; I did so partly because I loved him, but chiefly because
his life was most precious to me, for if he had died I should have
lost all clew to the bracelet. I had, of course, made sure that
he had not got them with him; over and over again I searched every
article in his possession. I ripped open his saddle lest they might
be sewn up in its stuffing. All that could be done I did, until I
was quite sure that he had not got them. He, on his part, came to
like me. He thought that I was the most faithful of servants, and
after the last time I saved his life he took me with him everywhere.
He went down to Madras, and was married there. I watched his every
movement. After that he went down frequently. Then a child was
born, and six months afterwards his wife died.
"The regiment was stationed at the fort. At that time he was
at many places--the governor's, the other officer sahibs', the
merchants', and others'. I could not follow him, but I was sure by
his manner that he had not taken back the bracelet from whoever he
had sent it to. I knew him so well by this time that I should have
noticed any change in his manner in a moment. At last the child
went away in the charge of Mrs. Cunningham. I bribed the child's
ayah, and she searched Mrs. Cunningham's boxes and every garment
she had, and found no small sealed parcel or box amongst them.
Three years more passed. By this time the Colonel treated me more
as a friend than as a servant. He said one day, laughing, 'It is
a long time since my things have been turned topsy turvy, Ramoo. I
think the thieves have come to the conclusion that I have not got
what they are looking for.' 'What is that, sahib?' I asked. 'Some
special jewels,' he said. 'They are extremely valuable. But I have
got them and a lot of other things so safely stowed that no one will
ever find them unless I give them the clew.' 'But suppose you are
killed, sahib,' I said; 'your little daughter will never get the
things.' 'I have provided for that,' he answered. 'If I am killed
I have arranged that she shall know all about it either when she
comes to the age of eighteen or twenty-one.'
"A few weeks after that he was wounded very badly. I nursed him
night and day for weeks, and when he came to England he brought me
with him. As you know, sahib, he died. When he was in London he
went to see Mrs. Cunningham and the child, and several times to
the office of the lawyer who attended your father's funeral. Then
he came down to your father, and I know he had long and earnest
conversations with him. I did all I could to listen, but the Colonel
always had the windows and doors shut before he began to speak.
I could see that your father was troubled. Then the Colonel died.
After his death I could never find his snuff box; he had carried
it about with him for some years; once or twice I had examined it,
but it was too small for the diamonds to be hidden in. I suppose
that he had given it to the sahib, your father, but as I could
never find it I guessed that there was some mystery attached to
it, though what I could not tell.
"Then your father took me down to Crowswood with him, and Mrs.
Cunningham and the little girl came down. I was surprised to find
that your father seemed to be master of the estate, and that no
one thought anything of the child, whose name had been changed. I
spoke one day to Mrs. Cunningham about it; your father seemed to
me a just and good man, and I could not believe that he was robbing
his brother's daughter. Mrs. Cunningham told me that the Colonel
did not wish her to be known as an heiress, and that he had left
the estate to his brother until she came of age. Your father was
as good a master as the Colonel had been. I watched and watched,
and once or twice I overheard him talking to himself in the library,
and discovered that your father himself was altogether ignorant of
the hiding place of the property that the Colonel had mentioned in
his will. I knew then that I should have to wait until the child
was either eighteen or twenty-one.
"It was a long time, but I had learnt to be patient. I was not
unhappy; I loved your father, I loved the Colonel's little daughter;
and I was very fond of you. All these things were small to me in
comparison to my vow and the finding the jewels of the god, but
they shortened the years of waiting. Then a year before the young
mistress was eighteen came the shot through the window. I did not
know who had fired it, but I saw that your father's life was in
danger, and I said to myself, 'He will tell the young sahib what
he knows about the bracelet.' After you had gone into the library
I opened the door quietly, and listened. I could hear much that
was said, but not all. I heard him say something about a snuff box,
and some means of finding the lost things being hidden in it, and
that he had kept them all these years in a secret hiding place,
which he described. You were to search for the diamonds, and I
guessed from that that he did not know what he was to be told when
the young memsahib came of age, or perhaps when she was eighteen.
It was not until I had thought over what I heard that I came to the
conclusion that if I could find the things he spoke of I might be
able to find the jewels. By that time your father had gone to bed.
I was foolish not to have been patient, but my blood boiled after
waiting for eighteen or nineteen years. The god seemed to have sent
me the chance, and it seemed to me that I should take it at once.
I knew that he generally slept with his window open, and it seemed
to me that it would be easy to slip in there and to get those things
from the cabinet. I knew where the ladder was kept. I took a file
from the tool chest and cut the chain."
"Good Heavens!" he exclaimed. "Then Bastow spoke truly, and he was
not my father's murderer! Never did a single suspicion of Ramoo
enter my head. This is appalling; but I cannot read any more now.
It is time for me to go and dress for dinner."
"Is anything the matter with you, Mark?" Millicent asked anxiously,
as she met him in the drawing room; "you look as white as a sheet."
"I have been reading Ramoo's letter, and he has told me some things
that have surprised and shocked me. I will tell you about them
after dinner, dear. It is a long story, but you won't have to wait
until Dick and the Gregs are gone. They are interested in all that
interests us, and shall hear the letter read. No; I think I will
ask them and Dick to come in the morning. I should not like anything
to sadden the first evening of our coming home."
"Yes, but it does not affect us, though it does affect Ramoo. Now
clear your brow, dear, and dismiss the subject from your mind, else
our guests will fancy that our marriage has not been altogether so
satisfactory as they had hoped."
"As if they could think such a thing as that, Mark," she said
indignantly. "But there is the sound of wheels; it is Mr. Chetwynd's
gig."
The three visitors all came in together, having met at the door.
Mark, with a great effort, put aside the letter from his mind,
and a cheerful evening was spent. They had much to tell of their
travels, many questions to ask about the parish and their mutual
friends and the neighborhood generally, and when they rose to go
Mark said:
"Would you mind riding over again tomorrow morning, Dick? I have
a letter to read to you that will interest you greatly."
"Say at eleven o'clock. It is a long epistle, and will take us an
hour to get through; after that we can stroll round, and, of course,
you will stop to lunch.
"I should be glad if you and Mrs. Greg can come over too," he
added, turning to the Rector; "you will be much interested also in
the matter."
The next day the party met in the library at the hour named. "I may
tell you, Mr. Greg, that I specially asked you and your wife here
because this letter throws some light on Arthur Bastow's connection
with my father's murder; you were friends with his father, and I
think you ought to know. As to you, Dick, the letter will interest
you from beginning to end, and will surprise as much as it will
interest you."
"Even I don't know what it is, Mrs. Greg," Millicent said. "I know
it quite upset Mark yesterday, but he said he would sooner I did
not know anything about it until today, as he did not want me to
be saddened on the first evening of our return home. Now, please
go on, Mark; you have said quite enough to excite us all."
Mark had read but a short distance when Dick Chetwynd exclaimed:
"Then Ramoo was at the bottom of that Indian business, after all.
I almost wonder you never suspected it, Mark."
"Well, I hardly could do so," Mark said, "when my uncle was so fond
of him, and he had served him so faithfully."
As he approached the point at which he had laid down the letter on
the previous evening, Millicent's color faded.
Suddenly an exclamation of horror broke from her when he read the
last line.
"Oh, Mark," she said, with quivering lips, "don't say it was Ramoo.
He always seemed so kind and good."
"It was here I stopped last night," he said, "but I fear there
can be no doubt about it. I must say that it is evident from this
letter, that no thought of doing my father harm was in his mind
when he placed that ladder against the window. Now I will go on."
"Having placed the ladder, I clambered to the window and quietly
entered the room. It was quite dark, but I knew the place of every
piece of furniture so well that I was able to go without hesitation
to the cabinet. Your father was speaking very slowly and distinctly
when he told you how it was to be opened, and I was able to do it
easily, but I did not know that the back opened with a sharp click,
and the noise startled me and woke your father. In an instant
he was out of bed and seized me by the throat. Now, he was a much
stronger man than I was. I struggled in vain. I felt that in a
moment I should become insensible; my vow and my duty to the god
flashed across me, and scarce knowing what I did, I drew a little
dagger I always carried, and struck blindly. He fell, and I fell
beside him. For a time I was insensible. When I recovered I was
seized with the bitterest remorse that I had killed one I loved, but
I seemed to hear the voice of the god saying, 'You have done well,
Ramoo. I am your great master, and you are bound to my service.'
"I got up almost blindly, felt in the cabinet, and found a coin and
a piece of paper, and a feeling of exultation came over me that,
after nearly twenty years, I should succeed in carrying out my vow
and taking his bracelet back to the god. I descended the ladder,
crept in the back door by which I had come out, went up to my room,
where I had kept a light burning, and examined my treasures. Then
I saw that all had been in vain. They were doubtless a key to the
mystery, but until a clew was given they were absolutely useless. I
sat for hours staring at them. I would have gone back and replaced
them in the cabinet and left all as it had been before, but I
dared not enter the room again. The next day I heard you say that
you suspected that the talk with your father had been overheard,
and that the man who had earlier in the evening before shot at him
had returned, and while listening had heard something said about the
hiding place, and thought that he would find some sort of treasure
there. I thought that in the talk your father might have told you
how to use these things, though I had not caught it, and it was
therefore important that you should have them back again, so I went
into the room after the inquest was over, and placed the things in
their hiding place again.
"Then, thinking it over, I determined to leave your service. You
would be trying to find the treasure, and I must watch you, and
this I could not do as long as I was a house servant; so I came up
to London, and you thought I had sailed for India, but I did not
go. I hired four Lascars, men of my own religion, and paid them to
watch every movement that you made, to see where you visited and
where you went. I paid them well, and they served me well; it was
so that I was able to bring those men to your help when but for
that you would have lost your life. It was for this to some extent
that I had you followed; for I soon found out that you were on the
search for the man who had fired through the window, and who you
believed had killed your father, rather than for the jewels. I knew
that you might run into danger, and partly because I loved you, and
partly because it was possible that it would be essential for that
coin and piece of paper to be produced in order that the treasure
might be obtained, I kept guard over you.
"When the 18th of August approached we were all on the watch. I
felt sure that you would take every possible precaution while you
had the bracelet in your possession. We knew who were your principal
friends, the banker's son and Mr. Chetwynd. On the 18th of August
everything went on as usual. On the following day the banker's son
came to you, and as soon as he left you, you went to the lawyer's,
and afterwards to the banker's. I felt sure now that it was at
that bank that the jewels had been placed, and that you had been
waiting till the young memsahib's birthday for the news that they
might be taken out; then you went to Mr. Chetwynd's, and he went
to the bank. I had no doubt that he was to take them out for you,
and after that one of the men never took his eyes off him when he
was outside of his house. Afterwards you went to the place where
the men used to fight, and the man who was watching you went in,
and had beer, and saw you talking with the big man you used to
fight with, in the parlor behind the bar. The watcher went out to
follow you, but left another to watch this man. We found that both
Mr. Chetwynd and he went to a shipping office in Tower Street,
and we then guessed that you intended to take the bracelet at once
across the sea.
"I went myself and found out that a vessel was sailing in two days
to Amsterdam. I took a passage for a man in the cheap cabin, and
asked to look at the list of passengers, as I believed that some
friend would be sailing by her; there were two men's names down
together in one handwriting among the first class passengers, and
I guessed that these were you and Mr. Chetwynd. I also saw the name
of the big man, which I had heard long before, down in the list of
passengers, and another name next to his in the same handwriting.
I did not know his name, but guessed that it was another of the
fighting men, and that they were going to look after you until you
had got rid of the diamonds. On the morning that she was to sail
one of the Lascars was on board; I thought it possible that in
order to throw anyone who might be following you off your scent
you might at the last moment go ashore, and that Mr. Chetwynd might
take the diamonds over, so I watched, and saw you on the deck with
your friend.
"I and the other three Lascars then took passage that evening in
a craft for Rotterdam, and got to Amsterdam two days before your
ship arrived; we went to different houses, and going separately into
the worst parts of the town, soon found a man who kept a gambling
den, and who was a man who could be trusted. I offered him a
thousand francs to collect twenty-five men, who were to be paid a
hundred francs each, and to be ready, if your ship arrived after
dark, to attack two passengers I would point out to them. I did not
want you to be hurt, so bargained that all knives were to be left
behind, and that he was to supply the men only with clubs. If the
ship came in in daylight you were to be attacked the first time
you went out after dark. You know how that was carried out. You
had two more men with you than I had expected; but I thought that
with a sudden rush you might all be separated. You know the rest.
The moment you were knocked down I and three others carried you to
a boat. It had been lying near the stairs, and we took you off to
the barge in which I had arranged you should be taken to Rotterdam.
"We told them that you were a drunken man who had been stunned
in a fight in a public house. As soon as we were off, I searched
you and found the diamonds. Then, as you know, we put you ashore.
We all crossed to England that night. Two days later I sailed in
this ship, the Brahmapootra. I am not afraid of telling you this,
because I know that the diamonds will not shine on the god's arm
until all fear of search and inquiry are over. My task will be
done when I hand them over to the man who holds the office I once
held; then I shall bear the penances imposed on me for having broken
my caste in every way, and for having taken life, and for the rest
of my days I shall wander as a fakir through India. I shall be
supported by the knowledge that I have done my duty to my god, and
have sacrificed all in his service, but it will ever be a grief to
me that in so doing it was necessary to sacrifice the life of one
who had ever shown me kindness. You may wonder why I have written
this, but I felt that I must own the truth to you, and that you
should know that if in the course of my duty to the god it was my
misfortune to slay your father, I have twice saved your life, just
as three times I saved that of the Colonel Sahib, your uncle."
There was silence for some little time after Mark had finished
reading.
"It is a strange story indeed," Mr. Greg said, "but it is not for
us to judge the man. He has acted according to his lights, and
none can do more. He sacrificed himself and his life solely to the
service of his god, well knowing that even were he successful, his
reward would be penance and suffering, and a life of what cannot
but be misery to a man brought up, as he has been, to consider
himself of the highest and holiest rank of the people. I think,
Mark, we need neither say nor think anything harshly of him."
"Certainly not," Mark agreed. "I can understand that according
to his view of the matter anything that stood between him and his
goal was but an obstacle to be swept aside; assuredly there was
no premeditation in the killing of my father. I have no doubt that
the man was attached to him, and that he killed him not to save
his own life, but in order that his mission might be carried out."
"Quite so, Mark; it was done in the same spirit, if I may say so,
that Abraham would have sacrificed his son at the order of his God.
What years of devotion that man has passed through! Accustomed,
as you see, to a lofty position, to the respect and veneration of
those around him, he became a servant, and performed duties that were
in his opinion not only humiliating, but polluting and destructive
to his caste, and which rendered him an outcast even among the
lowest of his people. Do you not think so, Mrs. Thorndyke?"
"I can only think of him as the man who twice saved Mark's life,"
she said.
"I understand why you have wished to tell me this story," the Rector
went on to Mark. "You wish me to know that Arthur Bastow did not
add this to his other crimes; that he was spared from being the
murderer of your father, but from no want of will on his part;
and, as we know, he killed many others, the last but an hour or two
before he put an end to his own life; still I am glad that this
terrible crime is not his. It seemed to be so revolting and unnatural.
It was the Squire's father who had given the living to his father,
and the Squire himself had been his friend in the greatest of his
trials, and had given him a shelter and a home in his old age. I
am glad, at least, that the man, evil as he was, was spared this
last crime of the grossest ingratitude."
"Well, Mark," Dick Chetwynd said cheerfully, in order to turn the
subject, "I am heartily glad that we have got to the bottom of this
jewel mystery. I have been puzzling over it all the time that you
have been away, and I have never been able to understand how, in
spite of the precautions that we took, they should have found out
that the jewels were at Cotter's, and that you had them on board
with you, and, above all, why they spared your life when they could
so easily and safely have put you out of the way. It is certainly
strange that while you were thinking over everything connected
with the jewels, the idea that Ramoo was the leading spirit in the
whole business should never once have occurred to you."
A month later, when Mark went up to town, he called at Leadenhall
Street.
"Of course, you have not heard of the arrival of the Brahmapootra
at Madras yet. May I ask when she left the Cape?"
"She never left the Cape, sir," the clerk replied, "and there are
very grave fears for her safety. She spoke the Surinam and gave
her mails for England when the latter was eight days out from the
Cape, and the Surinam reported that a day later she encountered
a terrible gale, lost several spars, and narrowly escaped being
blown onto the African coast. Since then we have had no news of the
Brahmapootra. A number of Indiamen have arrived since; the latest
came in only yesterday, and up to the time when she left no news
had been received of the ship. Three small craft had been sent up
the coast weeks before to make inquiries for her, but had returned
without being able to obtain any intelligence, and had seen no
wreckage on the coast, although they had gone several hundred miles
beyond where she had spoken the Surinam, therefore there can be
little doubt that she foundered with all hands during the gale.
You had no near relatives on board, I hope, sir?"
"No near relatives, but there was one on board in whom I was greatly
interested. Here is my card; I should feel greatly obliged if you
would write me a line should you hear anything of her."
"I will do so, sir. We have had innumerable inquiries from friends
and relatives of those on board, and although of late we have been
obliged to say that there can no longer be any hope that she will
ever be heard of, not a day passes but many persons still come in
to inquire."
No letter ever came to Mark; no news was ever heard of the
Brahmapootra. Ramoo's sacrifice was in vain, and never again did
the diamond bracelet glisten on the arm of the idol in the unknown
temple.