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Her complexion turned of a beautiful red, which I had never seen in it before; she brightened all over with a kind of speechless and breathless surprise. âWho is it?â I asked. Rosanna gave me back my own question. âOh! who is it?â she said softly, more to herself than to me. I twisted round on the sand and looked behind me. There, coming out on us from among the hills, was a bright-eyed young gentleman, dressed in a beautiful fawn-coloured suit, with gloves and hat to match, with a rose in his button-hole, and a smile on his face that might have set the Shivering Sand itself smiling at him in return. Before I could get on my legs, he plumped down on the sand by the side of me, put his arm round my neck, foreign fashion, and gave me a hug that fairly squeezed the breath out of my body. âDear old Betteredge!â says he. âI owe you seven-and-sixpence. Now do you know who I am?â
Lord bless us and save us! Hereâfour good hours before we expected himâwas Mr. Franklin Blake!
Before I could say a word, I saw Mr. Franklin, a little surprised to all appearance, look up from me to Rosanna. Following his lead, I looked at the girl too. She was blushing of a deeper red than ever, seemingly at having caught Mr. Franklinâs eye: and she turned and left us suddenly, in a confusion quite unaccountable to my mind, without either making her curtsy to the gentleman or saying a word to me. Very unlike her usual self: a civiller and better-behaved servant, in general, you never met with.
âThatâs an odd girl,â says Mr. Franklin. âI wonder what she sees in me to surprise her?â
âI suppose, sir,â I answered, drolling on our young gentlemanâs Continental education, âitâs the varnish from foreign parts.â
I set down here Mr. Franklinâs careless question, and my foolish answer, as a consolation and encouragement to all stupid peopleâit being, as I have remarked, a great satisfaction to our inferior fellow-creatures to find that their betters are, on occasions, no brighter than they are. Neither Mr. Franklin, with his wonderful foreign training, nor I, with my age, experience, and natural mother-wit, had the ghost of an idea of what Rosanna Spearmanâs unaccountable behaviour really meant. She was out of our thoughts, poor soul, before we had seen the last flutter of her little grey cloak among the sandhills. And what of that? you will ask, naturally enough. Read on, good friend, as patiently as you can, and perhaps you will be as sorry for Rosanna Spearman as I was, when I found out the truth.
5
The first thing I did, after we were left together alone, was to make a third attempt to get up from my seat on the sand. Mr. Franklin stopped me.
âThere is one advantage about this horrid place,â he said; âwe have got it all to ourselves. Stay where you are, Betteredge; I have something to say to you.â
While he was speaking, I was looking at him, and trying to see something of the boy I remembered, in the man before me. The man put me out. Look as I might, I could see no more of his boyâs rosy cheeks than of his boyâs trim little jacket. His complexion had got pale: his face, at the lower part, was covered, to my great surprise and disappointment, with a curly brown beard and mustachios. He had a lively touch-and-go way with him, very pleasant and engaging, I admit; but nothing to compare with his free-and-easy manners of other times. To make matters worse, he had promised to be tall, and had not kept his promise. He was neat, and slim, and well made; but he wasnât by an inch or two up to the middle height. In short, he baffled me altogether. The years that had passed had left nothing of his old self, except the bright, straightforward look in his eyes. There I found our nice boy again, and there I concluded to stop in my investigation.
âWelcome back to the old place, Mr. Franklin,â I said. âAll the more welcome sir, that you have come some hours before we expected you.â
âI have a reason for coming before you expected me,â answered Mr. Franklin. âI suspect, Betteredge, that I have been followed and watched in London, for the last three or four days; and I have travelled by the morning instead of the afternoon train, because I wanted to give a certain dark-looking stranger the slip.â
Those words did more than surprise me. They brought back to my mind, in a flash, the three jugglers, and Penelopeâs notion that they meant some mischief to Mr. Franklin Blake.
âWhoâs watching you, sirâand why?â I inquired.
âTell me about the three Indians you have had at the house to-day,â says Mr. Franklin, without noticing my question. âItâs just possible, Betteredge, that my stranger and your three jugglers may turn out to be pieces of the same puzzle.â
âHow do you come to know about the jugglers, sir?â I asked, putting one question on top of the other, which was bad manners, I own. But you donât expect much from poor human natureâso donât expect much from me.
âI saw Penelope at the house,â says Mr. Franklin; âand Penelope told me. Your daughter promised to be a pretty girl, Betteredge, and she has kept her promise. Penelope has got a small ear and a small foot. Did the late Mrs. Betteredge possess those inestimable advantages?â
âThe late Mrs. Betteredge possessed a good many defects, sir,â says I. âOne of them (if you will pardon my mentioning it) was never keeping to the matter in hand. She was more like a fly than a woman: she couldnât settle on anything.â
âShe would just have suited me,â says Mr. Franklin. âI never settle on anything either. Betteredge, your edge is better than ever. Your daughter said as much, when I asked for particulars about the jugglers. âFather will tell you, sir. Heâs a wonderful man for his age; and he expresses himself beautifully.â Penelopeâs own wordsâblushing divinely. Not even my respect for you prevented me fromânever mind; I knew her when she was a child, and sheâs none the worse for it. Letâs be serious. What did the jugglers do?â
I was something dissatisfied with my daughterânot for letting Mr. Franklin kiss her; Mr. Franklin was welcome to thatâbut for forcing me to tell her foolish story at second hand. However, there was no help for it now but to mention the circumstances. Mr. Franklinâs merriment all died away as I went on. He sat knitting his eyebrows, and twisting his beard. When I had done, he repeated after me two of the questions which the chief juggler had put to the boyâseemingly for the purpose of fixing them well in his mind.
ââIs it on the road to this house, and no other, that the English gentleman will travel to-day?â âHas the English gentleman got It about him?â I suspect,â says Mr. Franklin, pulling a little sealed paper parcel out of his pocket, âthat âItâ means this. And âthis,â Betteredge, means my uncle Herncastleâs famous Diamond.â
âGood Lord, sir!â I broke out, âhow do you come to be in charge of the wicked Colonelâs Diamond?â
âThe wicked Colonelâs will has left his Diamond as a birthday present to my cousin Rachel,â says Mr. Franklin. âAnd my father, as the wicked Colonelâs executor, has given it in charge to me to bring down here.â
If the sea, then oozing in smoothly over the Shivering Sand, had been changed into dry land before my own eyes, I doubt if I could have been more surprised than I was when Mr. Franklin spoke those words.
âThe Colonelâs Diamond left to Miss Rachel!â says I. âAnd your father, sir, the Colonelâs executor! Why, I would have laid any bet you like, Mr. Franklin, that your father wouldnât have touched the Colonel with a pair of tongs!â
âStrong language, Betteredge! What was there against the Colonel? He belonged to your time, not to mine. Tell me what you know about him, and Iâll tell you how my father came to be his executor, and more besides. I have made some discoveries in London about my uncle Herncastle and his Diamond, which have rather an ugly look to my eyes; and I want you to confirm them. You called him the âwicked Colonelâ just now. Search your memory, my old friend and tell me why.â
I saw he was in earnest, and I told him.
Here follows the substance of what I said, written out entirely for your benefit. Pay attention to it, or you will be all abroad, when we get deeper into the story. Clear your mind of the children, or the dinner, or the new bonnet, or what not. Try if you canât forget politics, horses, prices in the City, and grievances at the club. I hope you wonât take this freedom on my part amiss; itâs only a way I have of appealing to the gentle reader. Lord! havenât I seen you with the greatest authors in your hands, and donât I know how ready your attention is to wander when itâs a book that asks for it, instead of a person?
I spoke, a little way back, of my ladyâs father, the old lord with the short temper and the long tongue. He had five children in all. Two sons to begin with; then, after a long time, his wife broke out breeding again, and the three young ladies came briskly one after the other, as fast as the nature of things would permit; my mistress, as before mentioned, being the youngest and best of the three. Of the two sons, the eldest, Arthur, inherited the title and estates. The second, the Honourable John, got a fine fortune left him by a relative, and went into the army.
Itâs an ill bird, they say, that fouls its own nest. I look on the noble family of the Herncastles as being my nest; and I shall take it as a favour if I am not expected to enter into particulars on the subject of the Honourable John. He was, I honestly believe, one of the greatest blackguards that ever lived. I can hardly say more or less for him than that. He went into the army, beginning in the Guards. He had to leave the Guards before he was two-and-twentyânever mind why. They are very strict in the army, and they were too strict for the Honourable John. He went out to India to see whether they were equally strict there, and to try a little active service. In the matter of bravery (to give him his due), he was a mixture of bull-dog and game-cock, with a dash of the savage. He was at the taking of Seringapatam. Soon afterwards he changed into another regiment, and, in course of time, changed into a third. In the third he got his last step as lieutenant-colonel, and, getting that, got also a sunstroke, and came home to England.
He came back with a character that closed the doors of all his family against him, my lady (then just married) taking the lead, and declaring (with Sir Johnâs approval, of course) that her brother should never enter any house of hers. There was more than one slur on the Colonel that made people shy of him; but the blot of the Diamond is all I need mention here.
It was said that he got possession of his Indian jewel by means which, bold as he was, he didnât dare acknowledge. He never attempted to sell itânot being in need of money, and not (to give him his due again) making money an object. He never gave it away; he never even showed it to any living soul. Some said he was afraid of its getting him into a difficulty with the military authorities; others (very ignorant indeed of the real nature of the man) said he was afraid, if he showed it, of its costing him his life.
There was perhaps a grain of truth mixed up with this last report. It was false to say that he was afraid; but it was a fact that his life had been twice threatened in India; and it was firmly believed that the Moonstone was at the bottom of it. When he came back to England, and found himself avoided by everybody, the Moonstone was thought to be at the bottom of it again. The mystery of the Colonelâs life got in the Colonelâs way, and outlawed him, as you may say, among his own people. The men wouldnât let him into their clubs; the womenâmore than oneâwhom he wanted to marry, refused him; friends and relations got too near-sighted to see him in the street.
Some men in this mess would have tried to set themselves right with the world. But to give in, even when he was wrong, and had all society against him, was not the way of the Honourable John. He had kept the Diamond, in flat defiance of assassination, in India. He kept the Diamond, in flat defiance of public opinion, in England. There you have the portrait of the man before you, as in a picture: a character that braved everything; and a face, handsome as it was, that looked possessed by the devil.
We heard different rumours about him from time to time. Sometimes they said he was given up to smoking opium and collecting old books; sometimes he was reported to be trying strange things in chemistry; sometimes he was seen carousing and amusing himself among the lowest people in the lowest slums of London. Anyhow, a solitary, vicious, underground life was the life the Colonel led. Once, and once only, after his return to England, I myself saw him, face to face.
About two years before the time of which I am now writing, and about a year and a half before the time of his death, the Colonel came unexpectedly to my ladyâs house in London. It was the night of Miss Rachelâs birthday, the twenty-first of June; and there was a party in honour of it, as usual. I received a message from the footman to say that a gentleman wanted to see me. Going up into the hall, there I found the Colonel, wasted, and worn, and old, and shabby, and as wild and wicked as ever.
âGo up to my sister,â says he, âand say that I have called to wish my niece many happy returns of the day.â
He had made attempts by letter, more than once already, to be reconciled with my lady, for no other purpose, I am firmly persuaded, than to annoy her. But this was the first time he had actually come to the house. I had it on the tip of my tongue to say that my mistress had a party that night. But the devilish look of him daunted me. I went upstairs with his message, and left him, by his own desire, waiting in the hall. The servants stood staring at him, at a distance, as if he was a walking engine of destruction, loaded with powder and shot, and likely to go off among them at a momentâs notice.
My lady had a dashâno moreâof the family temper. âTell Colonel Herncastle,â she said, when I gave her her brotherâs message, âthat Miss Verinder is engaged, and that I decline to see him.â I tried for a civiller answer than that; knowing the Colonelâs constitutional superiority to the restraints which govern gentlemen in general. Quite useless! The family temper flashed out at me directly. âWhen I want your advice,â says my lady, âyou know that I always ask for it. I donât ask for it now.â I went downstairs with the message, of which I took the liberty of presenting a new and amended edition of my own contriving, as follows: âMy lady and Miss Rachel regret that they are engaged, Colonel; and beg to be excused having the honour of seeing you.â
I expected him to break out, even at that polite way of putting it. To my surprise he did nothing of the sort; he alarmed me by taking the thing with an unnatural quiet. His eyes, of a glittering bright grey, just settled on me for a moment; and he laughed, not out of himself, like other people, but into himself, in a soft, chuckling, horridly mischievous way. âThank you, Betteredge,â he said. âI shall remember my nieceâs birthday.â With that, he turned on his heel, and walked out of the house.
The next birthday came round, and we heard he was ill in bed. Six months afterwardsâthat is to say, six months before the time I am now writing ofâthere came a letter from a highly respectable clergyman to my lady. It communicated two wonderful things in the way of family news. First, that the Colonel had forgiven his sister on his deathbed. Second, that he had forgiven everybody else, and had made a most edifying end. I have myself (in spite of the bishops and the clergy) an unfeigned respect for the Church; but I am firmly persuaded, at the same time, that the devil remained in undisturbed possession of the Honourable John, and that the last abominable act in the life of that abominable man was (saving your presence) to take the clergyman in!
This was the sum-total of what I had to tell Mr. Franklin. I remarked that he listened more and more eagerly the longer I went on. Also, that the story of the Colonel being sent away from his sisterâs door, on the occasion of his nieceâs birthday, seemed to strike Mr. Franklin like a shot that had hit the mark. Though he didnât acknowledge it, I saw that I had made him uneasy, plainly enough, in his face.
âYou have said your say, Betteredge,â he remarked. âItâs my turn now. Before, however, I tell you what discoveries I have made in London, and how I came to be mixed up in this matter of the Diamond, I want to know one thing. You look, my old friend, as if you didnât quite understand the object to be answered by this consultation of ours. Do your looks belie you?â
âNo, sir,â I said. âMy looks, on this occasion at any rate, tell the truth.â
âIn that case,â says Mr. Franklin, âsuppose I put you up to my point of view, before we go any further. I see three very serious questions involved in the Colonelâs birthday-gift to my cousin Rachel. Follow me carefully, Betteredge; and count me off on your fingers, if it will help you,â says Mr. Franklin, with a certain pleasure in showing how clear-headed he could be, which reminded me wonderfully of old times when he was a boy. âQuestion the first: Was the Colonelâs Diamond the object of a conspiracy in India? Question the second: Has the conspiracy followed the Colonelâs Diamond to England? Question the third: Did the Colonel know the conspiracy followed the Diamond; and has he purposely left a legacy of trouble and danger to his sister, through the innocent medium of his sisterâs child? That is what I am driving at, Betteredge. Donât let me frighten you.â
It was all very well to say that, but he had frightened me.
If he was right, here was our quiet English house suddenly invaded by a devilish Indian Diamondâbringing after it a conspiracy of living rogues, set loose on us by the vengeance of a dead man. There was our situation as revealed to me in Mr. Franklinâs last words! Who ever heard the like of itâin the nineteenth century, mind; in an age of progress, and in a country which rejoices in the blessings of the British constitution? Nobody ever heard the like of it, and, consequently, nobody can be expected to believe it. I shall go on with my story, however, in spite of that.
When you get a sudden alarm, of the sort that I had got now, nine times out of ten the place you feel it in is your stomach. When you feel it in your stomach, your attention wanders, and you begin to fidget. I fidgeted silently in my place on the sand. Mr. Franklin noticed me, contending with a perturbed stomach or mindâwhich you please; they mean the same thingâand, checking himself just as he was starting with his part of the story, said to me sharply, âWhat do you want?â
What did I want? I didnât tell him; but Iâll tell you, in confidence. I wanted a whiff of my pipe, and a turn at Robinson Crusoe.
6
Keeping my private sentiments to myself, I respectfully requested Mr. Franklin to go on. Mr. Franklin replied, âDonât fidget, Betteredge,â and went on.
Our young gentlemanâs first words informed me that his discoveries, concerning the wicked Colonel and the Diamond, had begun with a visit which he had paid (before he came to us) to the family lawyer at Hampstead. A chance word dropped by Mr. Franklin, when the two were alone, one day, after dinner, revealed that he had been charged by his father with a birthday present to be taken to Miss Rachel. One thing led to another; and it ended in the lawyer mentioning what the present really was, and how the friendly connexion between the late Colonel and Mr. Blake, senior, had taken its rise. The facts here are really so extraordinary, that I doubt if I can trust my own language to do justice to them. I prefer trying to report Mr. Franklinâs discoveries, as nearly as may be, in Mr. Franklinâs own words.
âYou remember the time, Betteredge,â he said, âwhen my father was trying to prove his title to that unlucky Dukedom? Well! that was also the time when my uncle Herncastle returned from India. My father discovered that his brother-in-law was in possession of certain papers which were likely to be of service to him in his lawsuit. He called on the Colonel, on pretence of welcoming him back to England. The Colonel was not to be deluded in that way. âYou want something,â he said, âor you would never have compromised your reputation by calling on me.â My father saw that the one chance for him was to show his hand; he admitted, at once, that he wanted the papers. The Colonel asked for a day to consider his answer. His answer came in the shape of a most extraordinary letter, which my friend the lawyer showed me. The Colonel began by saying that he wanted something of my father, and that he begged to propose an exchange of friendly services between them. The fortune of war (that was the expression he used) had placed him in possession of one of the largest Diamonds in the world; and he had reason to believe that neither he nor his precious jewel was safe in any house, in any quarter of the globe, which they occupied together. Under these alarming circumstances, he had determined to place his Diamond in the keeping of another person. That person was not expected to run any risk. He might deposit the precious stone in any place especially guarded and set apartâlike a bankerâs or jewellerâs strong-roomâfor the safe custody of valuables of high price. His main personal responsibility in the matter was to be of the passive kind. He was to undertakeâeither by himself, or by a trustworthy representativeâto receive at a prearranged address, on certain prearranged days in every year, a note from the Colonel, simply stating the fact that he was a living man at that date. In the event of the date passing over without the note being received, the Colonelâs silence might be taken as a sure token of the Colonelâs death by murder. In that case, and in no other, certain sealed instructions relating to the disposal of the Diamond, and deposited with it, were to be opened, and followed implicitly. If my father chose to accept this strange charge, the Colonelâs papers were at his disposal in return. That was the letter.â
âWhat did your father do, sir?â I asked.
âDo?â says Mr. Franklin. âIâll tell you what he did. He brought the invaluable faculty, called common sense, to bear on the Colonelâs letter. The whole thing, he declared, was simply absurd. Somewhere in his Indian wanderings, the Colonel had picked up with some wretched crystal which he took for a diamond. As for the danger of his being murdered, and the precautions devised to preserve his life and his piece of crystal, this was the nineteenth century, and any man in his senses had only to apply to the police. The Colonel had been a notorious opium-eater for years past; and, if the only way of getting at the valuable papers he possessed was by accepting a matter of opium as a matter of fact, my father was quite willing to take the ridiculous responsibility imposed on himâall the more readily that it involved no trouble to himself. The Diamond and the sealed instructions went into his bankerâs strong-room, and the Colonelâs letters, periodically reporting him a living man, were received and opened by our family lawyer, Mr. Bruff, as my fatherâs representative. No sensible person, in a similar position, could have viewed the matter in any other way. Nothing in this world, Betteredge, is probable unless it appeals to our own trumpery experience; and we only believe in a romance when we see it in a newspaper.â
It was plain to me from this, that Mr. Franklin thought his fatherâs notion about the Colonel hasty and wrong.
âWhat is your own private opinion about the matter, sir?â I asked.
âLetâs finish the story of the Colonel first,â says Mr. Franklin. âThere is a curious want of system, Betteredge, in the English mind; and your question, my old friend, is an instance of it. When we are not occupied in making machinery, we are (mentally speaking) the most slovenly people in the universe.â
âSo much,â I thought to myself, âfor a foreign education! He has learned that way of girding at us in France, I suppose.â
Mr. Franklin took up the lost thread, and went on.
âMy father,â he said, âgot the papers he wanted, and never saw his brother-in-law again from that time. Year after year, on the prearranged days, the prearranged letter came from the Colonel, and was opened by Mr. Bruff. I have seen the letters, in a heap, all of them written in the same brief business-like form of words: âSirâThis is to certify that I am still a living man. Let the Diamond be. John Herncastle.â That was all he ever wrote, and that came regularly to the day; until some six or eight months since, when the form of the letter varied for the first time. It ran now: âSir,âThey tell me I am dying. Come to me, and help to make my will.â Mr. Bruff went, and found him, in the little suburban villa, surrounded by its own grounds, in which he had lived alone, ever since he had left India. He had dogs, cats, and birds to keep him company; but no human being near him, except the person who came daily to do the house-work, and the doctor at the bedside. The Will was a very simple matter. The Colonel had dissipated the greater part of his fortune in his chemical investigations. His Will began and ended in three clauses, which he dictated from his bed, in perfect possession of his faculties. The first clause provided for the safe keeping and support of his animals. The second founded a professorship of experimental chemistry at a northern university. The third bequeathed the Moonstone as a birthday present to his niece, on condition that my father would act as executor. My father at first refused to act. On second thoughts, however, he gave way, partly because he was assured that the executorship would involve him in no trouble; partly because Mr. Bruff suggested, in Rachelâs interest, that the Diamond might be worth something, after all.â
âDid the Colonel give any reason, sir,â I inquired, âwhy he left the Diamond to Miss Rachel?â
âHe not only gave the reasonâhe had the reason written in his will,â said Mr. Franklin. âI have got an extract, which you shall see presently. Donât be slovenly-minded, Betteredge! One thing at a time. You have heard about the Colonelâs Will; now you must hear what happened after the Colonelâs death. It was formally necessary to have the Diamond valued before the Will could be proved. All the jewellers consulted, at once confirmed the Colonelâs assertion that he possessed one of the largest diamonds in the world. The question of accurately valuing it presented some serious difficulties. Its size made it a phenomenon in the diamond market; its colour placed it in a category by itself; and, to add to these elements of uncertainty, there was a defect, in the shape of a flaw, in the very heart of the stone. Even with this last serious drawback, however, the lowest of the various estimates given was twenty thousand pounds. Conceive my fatherâs astonishment! He had been within a hairâs-breadth of refusing to act as executor, and of allowing this magnificent jewel to be lost to the family. The interest he took in the matter now, induced him to open the sealed instructions which had been deposited with the Diamond. Mr. Bruff showed this document to me, with the other papers; and it suggests (to my mind) a clue to the nature of the conspiracy which threatened the Colonelâs life.â
âThen you do believe, sir,â I said, âthat there was a conspiracy?â
âNot possessing my fatherâs excellent common sense,â answered Mr. Franklin, âI believe the Colonelâs life was threatened, exactly as the Colonel said. The sealed instructions, as I think, explain how it was that he died, after all, quietly in his bed. In the event of his death by violence (that is to say, in the absence of the regular letter from him at the appointed date), my father was then directed to send the Moonstone secretly to Amsterdam. It was to be deposited in that city with a famous diamond-cutter, and it was to be cut up into from four to six separate stones. The stones were then to be sold for what they would fetch, and the proceeds were to be applied to the founding of that professorship of experimental chemistry, which the Colonel has since endowed by his Will. Now, Betteredge, exert those sharp wits of yours, and observe the conclusion to which the Colonelâs instructions point!â
I instantly exerted my wits. They were of the slovenly English sort; and they consequently muddled it all, until Mr. Franklin took them in hand, and pointed out what they ought to see.
âRemark,â says Mr. Franklin, âthat the integrity of the Diamond, as a whole stone, is here artfully made dependent on the preservation from violence of the Colonelâs life. He is not satisfied with saying to the enemies he dreads, âKill meâand you will be no nearer the Diamond than you are now; it is where you canât get at itâin the guarded strong-room of a bank.â He says instead, âKill meâand the Diamond will be the Diamond no longer; its identity will be destroyed.â What does that mean?â
Here I had (as I thought) a flash of the wonderful foreign brightness.
âI know,â I said. âIt means lowering the value of the stone, and cheating the rogues in that way!â
âNothing of the sort,â says Mr. Franklin. âI have inquired about that. The flawed Diamond, cut up, would actually fetch more than the Diamond as it now is; for this plain reasonâthat from four to six perfect brilliants might be cut from it, which would be, collectively, worth more money than the largeâbut imperfectâsingle stone. If robbery for the purpose of gain was at the bottom of the conspiracy, the Colonelâs instructions absolutely made the Diamond better worth stealing. More money could have been got for it, and the disposal of it in the diamond market would have been infinitely easier, if it had passed through the hands of the workmen of Amsterdam.â
âLord bless us, sir!â I burst out. âWhat was the plot then?â
âA plot organised among the Indians who originally owned the jewel,â says Mr. Franklinââa plot with some old Hindoo superstition at the bottom of it. That is my opinion, confirmed by a family paper which I have about me at this moment.â
I saw, now, why the appearance of the three Indian jugglers at our house had presented itself to Mr. Franklin in the light of a circumstance worth noting.
âI donât want to force my opinion on you,â Mr. Franklin went on. âThe idea of certain chosen servants of an old Hindoo superstition devoting themselves, through all difficulties and dangers, to watching the opportunity of recovering their sacred gem, appears to me to be perfectly consistent with everything that we know of the patience of Oriental races, and the influence of Oriental religions. But then I am an imaginative man; and the butcher, the baker, and the tax-gatherer are not the only credible realities in existence to my mind. Let the guess I have made at the truth in this matter go for what it is worth, and let us get on to the only practical question that concerns us. Does the conspiracy against the Moonstone survive the Colonelâs death? And did the Colonel know it, when he left the birthday gift to his niece?â
I began to see my lady and Miss Rachel at the end of it all, now. Not a word he said escaped me.
âI was not very willing, when I discovered the story of the Moonstone,â said Mr. Franklin, âto be the means of bringing it here. But Mr. Bruff reminded me that somebody must put my cousinâs legacy into my cousinâs handsâand that I might as well do it as anybody else. After taking the Diamond out of the bank, I fancied I was followed in the streets by a shabby, dark-complexioned man. I went to my fatherâs house to pick up my luggage, and found a letter there, which unexpectedly detained me in London. I went back to the bank with the Diamond, and thought I saw the shabby man again. Taking the Diamond once more out of the bank this morning, I saw the man for the third time, gave him the slip, and started (before he recovered the trace of me) by the morning instead of the afternoon train. Here I am, with the Diamond safe and soundâand what is the first news that meets me? I find that three strolling Indians have been at the house, and that my arrival from London, and something which I am expected to have about me, are two special objects of investigation to them when they believe themselves to be alone. I donât waste time and words on their pouring the ink into the boyâs hand, and telling him to look in it for a man at a distance, and for something in that manâs pocket. The thing (which I have often seen done in the East) is âhocus-pocusâ in my opinion, as it is in yours. The present question for us to decide is, whether I am wrongly attaching a meaning to a mere accident? or whether we really have evidence of the Indians being on the track of the Moonstone, the moment it is removed from the safe keeping of the bank?â
Neither he nor I seemed to fancy dealing with this part of the inquiry. We looked at each other, and then we looked at the side, oozing in smoothly, higher and higher, over the Shivering Sand.
âWhat are you thinking of ?â says Mr. Franklin, suddenly.
âI was thinking, sir,â I answered, âthat I should like to shy the Diamond into the quicksand, and settle the question in that way.â
âIf you have got the value of the stone in your pocket,â answered Mr. Franklin, âsay so, Betteredge, and in it goes!â
Itâs curious to note, when your mindâs anxious, how very far in the way of relief a very small joke will go. We found a fund of merriment, at the time, in the notion of making away with Miss Rachelâs lawful property, and getting Mr. Blake, as executor, into dreadful troubleâthough where the merriment was, I am quite at a loss to discover now.
Mr. Franklin was the first to bring the talk back to the talkâs proper purpose. He took an envelope out of his pocket, opened it, and handed to me the paper inside.
âBetteredge,â he said, âwe must face the question of the Colonelâs motive in leaving this legacy to his niece, for my auntâs sake. Bear in mind how Lady Verinder treated her brother from the time when he returned to England, to the time when he told you he should remember his nieceâs birthday. And read that.â
He gave me the extract from the Colonelâs Will. I have got it by me while I write these words; and I copy it, as follows, for your benefit:
âThirdly, and lastly, I give and bequeath to my niece, Rachel Verinder, daughter and only child of my sister, Julia Verinder, widowâif her mother, the said Julia Verinder, shall be living on the said Rachel Verinderâs next Birthday after my deathâthe yellow Diamond belonging to me, and known in the East by the name of The Moonstone: subject to this condition, that her mother, the said Julia Verinder, shall be living at the time. And I hereby desire my executor to give my Diamond, either by his own hands or by the hands of some trustworthy representative whom he shall appoint, into the personal possession of my said niece Rachel, on her next birthday after my death, and in the presence, if possible, of my sister, the said Julia Verinder. And I desire that my said sister may be informed, by means of a true copy of this, the third and last clause of my Will, that I give the Diamond to her daughter Rachel, in token of my free forgiveness of the injury which her conduct towards me has been the means of inflicting on my reputation in my lifetime; and especially in proof that I pardon, as becomes a dying man, the insult offered to me as an officer and a gentleman, when her servant, by her orders, closed the door of her house against me, on the occasion of her daughterâs birthday.â
More words followed these, providing if my lady was dead, or if Miss Rachel was dead, at the time of the testatorâs decease, for the Diamond being sent to Holland, in accordance with the sealed instructions originally deposited with it. The proceeds of the sale were, in that case, to be added to the money already left by the Will for the professorship of chemistry at the university in the north.
I handed the paper back to Mr. Franklin, sorely troubled what to say to him. Up to that moment, my own opinion had been (as you know) that the Colonel had died as wickedly as he had lived. I donât say the copy from his Will actually converted me from that opinion: I only say it staggered me.
âWell,â says Mr. Franklin, ânow you have read the Colonelâs own statement, what do you say? In bringing the Moonstone to my auntâs house, am I serving his vengeance blindfold, or am I vindicating him in the character of a penitent and Christian man?â
âIt seems hard to say, sir,â I answered, âthat he died with a horrid revenge in his heart, and a horrid lie on his lips. God alone knows the truth. Donât ask me.â
Mr. Franklin sat twisting and turning the extract from the Will in his fingers, as if he expected to squeeze the truth out of it in that manner. He altered quite remarkably, at the same time. From being brisk and bright, he now became, most unaccountably, a slow, solemn, and pondering young man.
âThis question has two sides,â he said. âAn Objective side, and a Subjective side. Which are we to take?â
He had had a German education as well as a French. One of the two had been in undisturbed possession of him (as I supposed) up to this time. And now (as well as I could make out) the other was taking its place. It is one of my rules in life, never to notice what I donât understand. I steered a middle course between the Objective and the Subjective side. In plain English I stared hard, and said nothing.
âLetâs extract the inner meaning of this,â says Mr. Franklin. âWhy did my uncle leave the Diamond to Rachel? Why didnât he leave it to my aunt?â
âThatâs not beyond guessing, at any rate,â I said. âColonel Herncastle knew my lady well enough to know that she would have refused to accept any legacy that came to her from him.â
âHow did he know that Rachel might not refuse to accept it, too?â
âIs there any young lady in existence, sir, who could resist the temptation of accepting such a birthday present as the Moonstone?â
âThatâs the Subjective view,â says Mr. Franklin. âIt does you great credit, Betteredge, to be able to take the Subjective view. But thereâs another mystery about the Colonelâs legacy which is not accounted for yet. How are we to explain his only giving Rachel her birthday present conditionally on her mother being alive?â
âI donât want to slander a dead man, sir,â I answered. âBut if he has purposely left a legacy of trouble and danger to his sister, by the means of her child, it must be a legacy made conditional on his sisterâs being alive to feel the vexation of it.â
âOh! Thatâs your interpretation of his motive, is it? The Subjective interpretation again! Have you ever been in Germany, Betteredge?â
âNo, sir. Whatâs your interpretation, if you please?â