Sir Philip Heredith was a dignified
figure of an English country gentleman of the old
type. He was tall and thin, aristocratic of mien,
with white hair and faded blue eyes. His face
was not impressive. At first sight it seemed
merely that of a tired old man, weary of the paltry
exactions of life, and longing for rest; but, at odd
moments, one caught a passing resemblance to a caged
eagle in a swift turn of the falcon profile, or in
a sudden flash of the old eyes beneath the straight
Heredith brows. At such times the Heredith face the
warrior face of a long line of fierce fighters and
freebooting ancestors leaped alive in the
ageing features of the last but one of the race.
His companion was a man of about fifty-five.
His face was brown, as though from hot suns, his close-cropped
hair was silver-grey, and he had the bold, clear-cut
features of a man quick to make up his mind and accustomed
to command. His eyes were the strangest feature
of his dominating personality. They were small
and black, and appeared almost lidless, with something
in their dark direct gaze like the unwinking glare
of a snake. His apparel was unconventional, even
for war-time, consisting of a worn brown suit with
big pockets in the jacket, and a soft collar, with
a carelessly arranged tie. On the little finger
of his left hand he wore a ruby ring of noticeable
size and lustre.
Vincent Musard was a remarkable personality.
He came of a good county family, which had settled
in Sussex about the same time that the first Philip
Heredith had burnt down the moat-house, but his family
tree extended considerably beyond that period.
If the name of Here-Deith was inscribed in the various
versions of the Roll of Battle Abbey to be seen in
the British Museum, the name of Musard was to be found
in the French roll of “Les Compagnons
de Guillaume a la Conquête de
l’Angleterre en 1066,” the one genuine
and authentic list, which has received the stamp of
the French Archaeological Society, and is carved in
stone and erected in the Church of Dives on the coast
of Normandy. Vincent Musard was the last survivor
of an illustrious line, a bachelor, explorer, man of
science, and connoisseur in jewels. He had been
intended for the Church in his youth, but had quarrelled
with it on a question of doctrine. Since then
he had led a roving existence in the four corners of
the earth, exploring, botanizing, shooting big game,
and searching for big diamonds and rubies. He
had written books on all sorts of out-of-the-way subjects,
such as “The Flora of Chatham Islands,”
“Poisonous Spiders (genus Latrodectua) of Sardinia,”
“Fossil Reptilia and Moa Remains of New Zealand,”
and “Seals of the Antarctic.” But
his chief and greatest hobby was precious stones,
of which he was a recognized expert.
His father had left him a comfortable
fortune, but he had made another on his own account
by his dealings in gems, which he collected in remote
corners of the world and sold with great advantage
to London dealers. He was intimately acquainted
with all the known mines and pearl fisheries of the
world, but his success as a dealer in jewels was largely
due to the fact that he searched for them off the
beaten track. He had explored Cooper’s
Creek for white sapphires, the Northern Territory for
opals, and had once led an expedition into German
New Guinea in search of diamonds, where he had narrowly
escaped being eaten by cannibals.
The passage of time had not tamed
the fierce restlessness of his disposition. Although
he was not quite such a rover as of yore, the discovery
of a new diamond field in Brazil, or the news of a
new pearl bed in southern seas, was sufficient to
set him packing for another jaunt half round the world.
He was the oldest friend of the Herediths, and Miss
Heredith, in particular, had a high opinion of his
qualities. Musard, on his part, made no secret
of the fact that he regarded Miss Heredith as the
best of living women. It had, indeed, been rumoured
in the county a quarter of a century before that Vincent
Musard and Alethea Heredith were “going to make
a match of it.”
It was, perhaps, well for both that
the match was never made. Musard had departed
for one of his tours into the wilds of the world, not
to return to England until five years had elapsed.
Their mutual attraction was the attraction of opposites.
There was nothing in common except mutual esteem between
a wild, tempestuous being like Musard, who rushed through
life like a whirlwind, for ever seeking new scenes
in primitive parts of the earth, and the tranquil
mistress of the moat-house, who had rarely been outside
her native county, and revolved in the same little
circle year after year, happy in her artless country
pursuits and simple pleasures.
Of late years, Musard had spent most
of his brief stays in England with the Herediths.
He had his own home, which was not far from the moat-house,
but he was a companionable man, and preferred the warm
welcome and kindly society of his old friends to the
solitary existence of a bachelor at Brandreth Hall,
as his own place was named.
He had recently returned to England
after a year’s wanderings in the southern hemisphere,
and had arrived at the moat-house on the previous
day, bringing with him a dried alligator’s head
with gaping jaws, a collection of rare stuffed birds
and snakeskins for Phil, who had a taste in that direction,
and a carved tiki god for Miss Heredith. He had
also brought with him his Chinese servant, two kea
parrots, and a mat of white feathers from the Solomon
Islands, which he used on his bed instead of an eiderdown
quilt when the nights were cold. He had left in
his London banker’s strong room his latest collection
of precious stones, after forwarding anonymously to
Christie’s a particularly fine pearl as a donation
towards the British Red Cross necklace.
Musard’s present stay at the
moat-house was to be a brief one. The British
Government, on learning of his return to his native
land, had asked him to go over to the front to adjust
some trouble which had arisen between the head-men
of a Kaffir labour compound. As Musard’s
wide knowledge of African tribes rendered him peculiarly
fitted for such a task, he had willingly complied
with the request, and was to go to France on the following
day.
Miss Heredith had taken advantage
of his brief visit to consult him about the Heredith
pearl necklace a piece of jewellery which
was perhaps more famous than valuable, as some of
the pearls were nearly three hundred years old.
Sir Philip had given it to Violet when she married
Phil. But Violet had locked it away in her jewel-case
and never worn it. She had said, only the night
before, that the setting of the clasp was old-fashioned,
and the pearls dull with age. Miss Heredith,
although much hurt, had realized that there was some
truth in the complaint, and she had asked Musard for
his advice. Musard had expressed the opinion
that perhaps the pearls were in need of the delicate
operation known as “skinning,” and had
offered to take the necklace to London and obtain
the opinion of a Hatton Garden expert of his acquaintance.
Vincent Musard smiled at Miss Heredith
in friendly fashion as he entered the dining-room,
and Sir Philip greeted his sister with polite, but
somewhat vague courtesy. Sir Philip’s manner
to everybody was distinguished by perfect urbanity,
which was so impersonal and unvarying as to suggest
that it was not so much a compliment to those upon
whom it was bestowed as a duty which he felt he owed
to himself to perform with uniform exactitude.
Musard began to talk about the arrangements
for his departure the following day, and asked Tufnell
about the trains. On learning that the first
train to London was at eight o’clock, he expressed
his intention of catching it.
“Is it necessary for you to
go so early, Vincent?” inquired Miss Heredith.
“Could you not take a later train?”
“I daresay I could. Why do you ask?”
“I was thinking about the necklace.
Violet was too unwell to give it to me to-night, and
she may not be awake so early in the morning.
I should like you to take it with you, if it could
be managed.”
“I can take a later train. It will suit
me as well.”
“Is Violet unable to go with
us to the Weynes’ to-night?” said Sir
Philip, glancing at his sister.
“Yes; her head is too bad.”
“It is a pity we have to go
without her, as the party is given in her honour.
Of course, we must go.”
“Where is her necklace?”
asked Musard. “Is it in the safe?”
“No,” replied Miss Heredith.
“It is in Violet’s room, in her jewel-case.”
“Well, as Mrs. Heredith will
be alone in the house to-night, I think it would be
wise if you locked it in the safe,” said Musard.
“There are many servants in the house.”
“I think that is quite unnecessary,
Vincent. Our servants are all trustworthy.”
“Quite so, but several of your
guests have brought their own servants maids
and valets.”
“Very well. If you think
so, Vincent, I will see to it after dinner.”
The conversation was terminated by
the sound of the dinner-gong. The guests came
down to dinner in ones and twos, and assembled in the
drawing-room before proceeding to the dining-room.
The men who were not in khaki were dressed for dinner.
The gathering formed a curious mixture of modern London
and ancient England. The London guests, who were
in the majority, consisted of young officers, some
young men from the War Office and the Foreign Office,
a journalist or two, and the ladies Miss Heredith
had entertained at tea on the lawn. These people
had been invited because they were friends of the
young couple, and not because they were anybody particular
in the London social or political world, though one
or two of the young men had claims in that direction.
Mingled with this very modern group were half a dozen
representatives of old county families, who had been
invited by Miss Heredith.
The party sat down to dinner.
There were one or two murmurs of conventional regret
when Miss Heredith explained the reason of Mrs. Heredith’s
vacant place, but the majority of the London guests particularly
the female portion recognized the illness
as a subterfuge and accepted it with indifference.
If Mrs. Heredith was bored with her guests they, on
their part, were tired of their visit. The house
party had not been a success. The London visitors
found the fixed routine of life in a country house
monotonous and colourless, and were looking forward
to the termination of their visit. The life they
had led for the past fortnight was not their way of
life. They met each morning for breakfast at
nine o’clock Miss Heredith was a stickler
for the mid-Victorian etiquette of everybody sitting
down together at the breakfast table. After breakfast
the men wandered off to their own devices for killing
time: some to play a round of golf, others to
go shooting or fishing, generally not reappearing
until dinner-time. After dinner they played billiards
or auction bridge, and the ladies knitted war socks
or sustained themselves till bedtime with copious draughts
of the mild stimulant supplied by their favourite
lady novelists. At half-past ten o’clock
Tufnell entered with a tray of glasses, and the guests
partook of a little refreshment. At eleven Miss
Heredith bade her visitors a stately good-night, and
they retired to their bedrooms. The great lady
of the moat-house was a firm believer in the axiom
that a woman should be mistress in her own household,
and she saw no reason why her guests should not adopt
her way of life while under her roof. She was
a country woman born and bred, believing in the virtues
of an early bed and early rising, and she was not
to be put out of her decorous regular way of living
by Londoners who turned night into day with theatres,
late suppers, night clubs, and other pernicious forms
of amusement which Miss Heredith had read about in
the London papers.
Dinner at the moat-house was a solemn
and ceremonious function. In accordance with
the time-honoured tradition of the family, it was served
at the early hour of seven o’clock in the big
dining-room, an ancient chamber panelled with oak
to the ceiling, with a carved buffet, an open fireplace,
Jacobean mantelpiece, and old family portraits on the
walls. There were sconces on the walls, and a
crystal chandelier for wax candles was suspended from
the centre of the ceiling above the table. The
chandelier was never lit, as the moat-house was illuminated
by electric light, but it looked very pretty, and
was the apple of Miss Heredith’s eye as
the maidservants were aware, to their cost.
The dinner that night was, as usual,
very simple, as befitted a patriotic English household
in war-time, but the wines made up for the lack of
elaborate cooking. Sir Philip Heredith and his
sister followed their King’s example of abstaining
from wine during the duration of war, but it was not
in accordance with Sir Philip’s idea of hospitality
to enforce abstinence on their guests, and the men,
at all events, sipped the rare old products of the
Heredith cellars with unqualified approval, enhanced
by painful recollections of the thin war claret and
sugared ports of London clubs. Such wine, they
felt, was not to be passed by. Of the young men,
Phil Heredith alone drank water, not for the same reason
as his father, but because he had always been a water
drinker.
Under the influence of the good wine
the guests brightened up considerably as the meal
proceeded. Sir Philip, in his old-fashioned way,
raised his glass of aerated water to one and another
of the young men. He was an ideal host, and his
unfailing polished courtesy hid the fact that he was
looking forward to the break up of the party with a
relief akin to that felt by the majority of his guests.
Conversation had been confined to monosyllables at
first, but became quite flourishing and animated as
the dinner went on. Miss Heredith smiled and looked
pleased. As a hostess, she liked to see her guests
happy and comfortable, even if she did not like her
guests.
The conversation was mainly about
the war: the Allies’ plans and hopes and
fears. Several of the young men from London gave
their views with great authority, criticising campaigns
and condemning generals. Phil Heredith listened
to this group without speaking. Two country gentlemen
in the vicinity also listened in silence. They
were amazed to hear such famous military names, whom
they had been led by their favourite newspapers to
regard as the hope of the country’s salvation,
criticised so unmercifully by youngsters.
“And do you think the war will
soon be over, Mr. Brimley?” said a feminine
voice, rather loudly, during a lull in the conversation.
The speaker was a near neighbour and friend of Miss
Heredith’s, Mrs. Spicer, who was not a member
of the house party, but had been invited to dinner
that night and was going to the Weynes’ afterwards.
She was stout and fresh-faced, and looked thoroughly
good-natured and kind-hearted.
She addressed her question to a tall
young man with prematurely grey hair, prominent eyes,
and a crooked nose. His name was Brimley, and
he was well-known in London journalism. His portrait
occasionally appeared in the picture papers as “one
of the young lions of Fleet Street,” but his
enemies preferred to describe him as one of Lord Butterworth’s
jackals Lord Butterworth being the millionaire
proprietor of an influential group of newspapers which,
during the war, had stood for “the last drop
of blood and the last shilling” rallying cry.
As one of the foremost of this group of patriots,
Mr. Brimley had let his ink flow so freely in the
Allies’ cause that it was whispered amongst those
“in the know” that he was certain for
a knighthood, or at least an Empire Order, in the
next list of honours.
Mr. Brimley looked at the speaker
haughtily, and made an inaudible reply. Although
he was a lion of Fleet Street, he did not relish being
called upon to roar in the wilds of Sussex.
“Won’t the poor German
people be delighted when our troops march across the
Rhine to deliver them from militarism,” continued
the old lady innocently.
There was a subdued titter from the
younger girls at this, and a young officer sitting
near the bottom of the table laughed aloud, then flushed
suddenly at his breach of manners.
“Have I said something foolish?”
asked the old lady placidly. “Please tell
me if I have I don’t mind.”
“Not at all,” said another
young officer, with a beardless sunburnt face.
“Personally, I quite agree with you. The
Germans ought to be jolly well pleased to be saved
from their beastly selves.”
“What a number of land girls
you have in this part of the world, Miss Heredith,”
remarked the young officer who had laughed, as though
anxious to turn the conversation. “I saw
several while I was out shooting to-day, and very
charming they looked. I had no idea that sunburn
was so becoming to a girl’s complexion.
I saw one girl who had been riding a horse through
the woods, and she looked like what’s-her-name Diana.
She had bits of green stuff sticking all over her,
and cobwebs in her hair.”
“That reminds me of a good story,”
exclaimed a chubby-faced youth in the uniform of the
Flying Corps. “You’ll appreciate it,
Denison. Old Graham, of the Commissariat, was
out golfing the other day, and he turned up at the
club all covered with cobwebs. Captain Harding,
of our lot, who was just back in Blighty from eighteen
months over there, said to him, ‘Hullo, Graham,
I see you’ve been down at the War Office.’
Ha, ha!”
The other young men in khaki joined
in the laugh, but a tall gaunt man with an authoritative
glance, the Denison referred to, looked rather angry.
Miss Heredith, with a hostess’s watchful tact
for the suspectibilities of her guests, started to
talk about a show for allotment holders which had
been held in the moat-house grounds a few weeks before.
It seemed that most of the villagers were allotment
holders, and the show had been held to stimulate their
patriotic war efforts to increase the national food
supply. The village had entered into it with
great spirit, and some wonderful specimens of fruit,
vegetables, poultry and rabbits had been exhibited.
“The best part of it was that
Rusher, my own gardener, was beaten badly in every
class,” put in Sir Philip, with a smile.
“Not in every class,”
corrected Miss Heredith. “The peaches and
nectarines from the walled garden were awarded
first prize.”
“Rusher was beaten in the vegetable
classes in giant vegetable marrows and
cabbages,” retorted Sir Philip, with a chuckle.
“He hasn’t got over it yet. He suspects
the vicar of favouritism in awarding the prizes.
The fact that his daughter won first prize for rabbits
with a giant Belgian did little to console him.”
“And we raised quite a respectable
sum for the Red Cross by charging threepence admission
to see a stuffed menagerie of Phil’s,”
added Miss Heredith.
“A stuffed menagerie! What
a curious thing,” remarked a young lady.
“Not quite a menagerie,”
said Sir Philip. “Merely the stuffed remains
of some animals Phil used to keep as a youngster.
When they died as they invariably did he
used to skin them and stuff them. He was quite
an expert taxidermist.”
“Tell them about your museum
exhibit, Philip,” said Miss Heredith, with quite
an animated air.
“We also arranged a little exhibition
of er old things,” continued
Sir Philip diffidently. “Armour, miniatures,
some old jewels, and things like that. That also
brought in quite a respectable sum for the Red Cross.”
“From the Heredith collection,
I presume?” said Mr. Brimley.
“What wonderful old treasures
you must have in this wonderful old house of yours,”
gushed the young lady who had spoken before. “I
am so disappointed in not seeing the Heredith pearl
necklace. What a pity dear Mrs. Heredith is ill.
She was going to wear the pearls to-night, and now
I shall have to go away without seeing them.”
Sir Philip bowed. He did not
quite relish the trend of the conversation, but he
was too well-bred to show it.
“You shall see the pearls in
the morning,” said Miss Heredith courteously.
“I adore pearls,” sighed the guest.
“If you admire pearls, you should
see the collection which is being made for the British
Red Cross,” remarked Vincent Musard. “I
had a private view the other day. It is a truly
magnificent collection.”
All eyes were turned on the speaker.
The topic interested every lady present, and they
were aware that Musard was one of the foremost living
authorities on jewels. The men had all heard of
the famous traveller by repute, and they wanted to
listen to what he had to say. Musard seemed rather
embarrassed to find himself the object of general attention,
and went on with his dinner in silence. But some
of the ladies were determined not to lose the opportunity
of learning something from such a well-known expert
on a subject so dear to their hearts, and they plied
him with eager questions.
“It must be a wonderful collection,”
said a slight and slender girl named Garton, with
blue eyes and red hair. She was a lady journalist
attached to Mr. Brimley’s paper. Twenty
years ago she would have been called an advanced woman.
She believed in equality for the sexes in all things,
and wrote articles on war immorality, the “social
evil” and kindred topics in a frank unabashed
way which caused elderly old-fashioned newspaper readers
much embarrassment. Miss Garton was just as eager
as the more frivolous members of her sex to hear about
the Red Cross pearls, and begged Mr. Musard to give
her some details. She would have to do a “write
up” about the necklace when she returned to London,
she said, and any information from Mr. Musard would
be so helpful.
“It is not a single necklace,”
said Musard. “There are about thirty necklaces.
The Red Cross committee have already received nearly
4,000 pearls, and more are coming in every day.”
“Four thousand pearls!”
“How perfectly lovely!” “How I should
love to see them!” These feminine exclamations
sounded from different parts of the table.
“I suppose the collection is
a very fine and varied one?” observed Sir Philip.
“Undoubtedly. The committee
have had the advice of the best experts in London,
who have given much time to grading the pearls for
the different necklaces. In an ordinary way it
takes a long while sometimes years to
match the pearls for a faultless necklace, but in this
case the experts have had such a variety brought to
their hands that their task has been comparatively
easy. But in spite of the skilful manner in which
the necklaces have been graded, it is even now a simple
matter for the trained eye to identify a number of
the individual pearls. The largest, a white pearl
of pear shape, weighing 72 grains, would be recognized
by any expert anywhere. There are several other
pearls over thirty grains which the trained eye would
recognize with equal ease in any setting. The
few pink and black pearls are all known to collectors,
and it is the same with the clasps. One diamond
and ruby clasp is as well-known in jewel history as
the State Crown. The diamonds are in the form
of a Maltese Cross, set in a circle of rubies.”
“That must have been the gift
of the Duchess of Welburton,” remarked Sir Philip.
“She inherited it from her great aunt, Adelina,
wife of the third duke. There was a famous pearl
necklace attached to the clasp once, but it disappeared
about ten years ago at a ball given by the German
Ambassador, Prince Litzovny. I remember there
was a lot of talk about it at the time, but the necklace
was never recovered. The clasp, too, has a remarkable
history.”
“All great jewels have,”
said Musard. “In fact, all noteworthy stones
have dual histories. Their career as cut and polished
gems is only the second part. Infinitely more
interesting is the hidden history of each great jewel,
from the discovery of the rough stone to the period
when it reaches the hands of the lapidary, to be polished
and cut for a drawing-room existence. What a
record of intrigue and knavery, stabbings and poisonings,
connected with some of the greatest jewels in the
British Crown the Black Prince’s ruby,
for example!”
Musard gazed thoughtfully at the great
ruby on his own finger as he ceased speaking.
The guests had finished dinner, and Miss Heredith,
with a watchful eye on the big carved clock which
swung a sedate pendulum by the fireplace, beckoned
Tufnell to her and directed him to serve coffee and
liqueurs at table.
“What is your favourite stone,
Mr. Musard?” said a bright-eyed girl sitting
near him, after coffee had been served.
“Personally I have a weakness
for the ruby,” replied Musard. “Its
intrinsic value has been greatly discounted in these
days of synthetic stones, but it is still my favourite,
largely, I suppose, because a perfect natural ruby
is so difficult to find. I remember once journeying
three thousand miles up the Amazon in search of a ruby
reputed to be as large as a pigeon’s egg.
But it did not exist it was a myth.”
“What a life yours has been!”
said the girl. “How different from the
humdrum existence of us stay-at-homes! How I should
like to hear some of your adventures. They must
be thrilling.”
“If you want to hear a real
thrilling adventure, Miss Finch, you should get Mr.
Musard to tell you how he came by that ruby he is wearing,”
said Phil Heredith, joining in the conversation.
The eyes of all the guests were directed
to the ring which Musard was wearing on the little
finger of his left hand. The stone in the plain
gold setting was an unusually large one, nearly an
inch in length. The stone had been polished,
not cut, and glowed rather than sparkled with a deep
rich red the true “pigeon’s-blood”
tint so admired by connoisseurs.
“Nonsense, Phil” Musard
flushed under his brown skin “your
guests do not want to hear me talk any more about
myself. I’ve monopolized the conversation
too long already.”
“Oh, please do tell us!” exclaimed several
of the guests.
“Really, you know, I’d
rather not,” responded Musard, in some embarrassment.
“It’s a long story, for one thing, and
it’s not quite how shall I express
it it’s a bit on the horrible side
to relate in the presence of ladies.”
“I do not think that need deter
you,” remarked one of the young officers drily.
“We are all pretty strong-minded nowadays since
the War.”
“Oh, we should love to hear
it,” said the lady journalist, who scented good
“copy.” “Shouldn’t we?”
she added, turning to some of the ladies near her.
“Yes, indeed!” chorused the other ladies.
“Do tell us.”
“Go ahead, Musard you see you can’t
get out of it,” said Phil.
“Perhaps, Phil, as Mr. Musard
does not think it a suitable story ”
commenced Miss Heredith tentatively. Her eye was
fixed anxiously on the clock, which was verging on
twenty minutes past seven, and she feared the relation
of her old friend’s experience might make them
late at the Weynes. But at that moment Tufnell
approached his mistress and caught her eye. A
slight shade of annoyance crossed her brow as she
listened to something he communicated in a low voice,
and she turned to her guests.
“I must ask you to excuse me for a few moments,”
she said.
She rose from her place and left the
room. As the door closed behind her the ladies
turned eagerly to Musard.
“Now, please, tell us about the ruby,”
said several in unison.
The explorer glanced at the eager faces looking towards
him.
“Very well, I will tell you
the story,” he said quietly, but with visible
reluctance.