I was not disappointed in my interview
with the up-town jeweller, who, being as real as the
World’s Fair itself, must not be named.
In order to identify the jewel offered
by the strange woman, I took Monsieur Lausch with
me, and he at once declared the description of the
emerald to correspond precisely with the one stolen
from him, and when I had listened to the description
of the woman who had offered the gem, I was quite
as confident that this person was the brunette and
no other.
True, she had assumed a foreign accent
and had laid aside her rather jaunty dress for a more
sober and foreign-looking attire; she had made herself
up, in fact, as a German woman, well dressed after
the fashion of the German bourgeois; but she had added
nothing to her face save a pair of gold-framed spectacles;
and while I kept my knowledge to myself, I felt none
the less sure that I had another link ready for the
chain I was trying to forge for this troublesome brunette,
who was so busy casting her shadows across my path
and disarranging my plans.
The writer of the anonymous letter,
for such it was, turned out to be a practical jeweller
in the employ of a certain jewel merchant, and I never
knew whether he had made his employer’s purchase
known to us for the sake of the reward, or to gratify
some personal spite or sense of injury. Whichever
it may have been, it concerned us little. We gave
him our word not to use his name in approaching his
employer, and our promise of a suitable reward should
we find his story of use upon further investigation,
and then we sought the purchaser of the jewel.
With him we dealt very cavalierly.
We knew, no matter how, that he had purchased an emerald
of value, we told him; and I further added that he
had bought it from an accomplice, knowing that such
an accusation would soonest bring about the desired
result, as indeed it did.
A sight of the jewel sent Monsieur
Lausch into raptures and rages. It was the lost
emerald, the finest of them all!
That he could not at once carry away
the gem somewhat modified the rapture, but we came
away quite satisfied on the whole, he that the emerald
would soon be restored to him, and I that I at last
knew how to deal with the brunette always
provided I should find her again after the events
of the day and night previous.
On the second day after his plunge
into the lagoon I took Miss Jenrys and her aunt to
see the injured guard, who was booked at the hospital
as ‘Carr.’
The blow upon the head had resulted
first in unconsciousness, and later in a mild form
of delirium. I had made a preparatory visit to
the hospital, and was able to tell Miss Jenrys that
the patient would not recognise her or any of us.
I thought that she seemed almost relieved
at this intelligence, especially after I had assured
her that the surgeon in charge had assured me that
the delirium was much to be preferred as a less dangerous
symptom than the lethargy of the first twenty-four
hours.
‘Mr. Masters,’ she had
said to me on our way to the hospital, ’there
is one thing which I overlooked in telling you what
I could about Mr. Lossing. I I
trust you have not told them at the hospital, or anywhere,
that he is not what he has represented himself.’
I hastened to assure her that this
secret rested still between us two, and she drew a
quick breath of relief.
‘If he should die,’ I
added, watching furtively the sudden paling of her
fair cheek, ’it would become my duty and yours
to tell the truth, all of it. As he seems likely
to recover, we may safely let the disclosure rest
with him.’
‘I am glad!’ she said.
’So long as he chooses to be Mr. Carr,
I cannot of course claim his acquaintance. You you
are sure he will not know me?’
‘Quite sure,’ I replied;
and she said no more until we had reached the hospital.
We were asked to wait for a few moments
in the outer office or reception room. The doctor
was occupied for the moment, the attendant said, but
an instant later the same attendant beckoned me outside.
‘Come this way a moment,’
he whispered. ’The doctor wishes to speak
with you.’
I murmured an excuse to the ladies,
and went to the doctor in his little private room
near by.
‘When you were here,’
he began, putting out his hand to me, ’I was
preoccupied and you were in haste. There is something
concerning our patient that you, as his friend, must
know. By the way, has he any nearer friends than
yourself at hand?’
‘I believe not,’ I replied
briefly. ‘I hope he is not worse, doctor?’
’No, not that, though he’s
bad enough. But you remember the sailors who
came with you said that he had struck against the boat
in falling, and we decided, rather hastily, that this
was the cause of the wound and swelling. In fact,
it was the swelling which misled us. We could
not examine closely until it was somewhat reduced;
but this morning, after the wound was washed and cleansed
for the new dressing, I found that the hurt upon the
head was caused, not by contact with a blunt piece
of wood, but by something hard, sharp, and somewhat
uneven of surface; a stone, I should say, or a piece
of old iron a blow, in fact.’
‘Ah!’ the sudden thought
that came to me caused me to start; but after a moment
I said:
’I do not doubt it. The
fellows that made the attack are equal to worse things
than that. I think, from what I know and guess
at, the weapon may have been a sling of stones or
bits of iron, tied in an old bandana.’
I did not tell him that this was said
to be one of Greenback Bob’s favourite modes
of attack, and of defence, too, when otherwise unarmed.
In fact, I said nothing to further indicate my knowledge
of the assailants of our patient. But I got back
to the ladies at once, after thanking the doctor,
telling myself that his information would make the
charge against the miscreants, when captured, stronger
and more serious, if that were needful.
When Miss Jenrys stood by the cot
where the injured man lay, pallid and weak, with great
dark lines beneath his eyes and his head swathed in
bandages, I saw her start and shiver, and the slight
colour in an already unusually pale face fade out,
leaving her cheek as white as that upon the pillow.
The small hand clenched itself until the dainty glove
was drawn to the point of bursting; the lips trembled,
and the tears stood in the sweet eyes. She turned
to the physician, and drew back a little as the head
upon the pillow moved restlessly.
’I I have not seen
him for some time. Do do you think
it could possibly startle him if if
he should recognise me?’
’If it were possible, which,
I fear, it is not now there is
nothing that would benefit him so much.’
She went close to the cot then, and,
bending down, looked into the restless blue eyes.
‘How do you do?’ she said clearly.
The restless eyes were still for a
moment; then the head upon the pillow moved as if
essaying a bow, and the right hand was feebly lifted.
She took his hand as if in greeting,
and said again, speaking softly and clearly:
‘Won’t you go and speak with my Aunt Charlotte?’
A startled look came into the eyes;
a look of distress crossed the face. He made
a feeble gesture with the right hand; a great sigh
escaped his lips, and then they parted.
‘Strange,’ they muttered
feebly, ‘cruel mistaken heartless!’
His hand dropped heavily, and, quick as thought, Miss
Jenrys lifted her head and drew back, her face one
rosy glow from temples to chin; and now the sweet
Quakeress interposed with womanly tact:
’He does not know thee, dear;
and perhaps our presence may disturb him, in this
weakened state.’ She bent over the sick
man for a moment, scanned the pale, handsome features
closely, gently put back a stray lock of hair that
had escaped from beneath the bandage and lay across
the white full temple. Then she turned to the
doctor:
’In the absence of nearer friends,
doctor, we will stand in their stead. Will you
give him your best care and let nothing be lacking?
When we can serve him in any manner, thee will inform
us through Mr. Masters, I trust; and, with your permission,
I will call to ask after him each day until he is
better.’
Sweet soul! How plain to me was
the whole tender little episode! I could imagine
June Jenrys telling the story of her rupture with young
Lossing as frankly as she had written it to her friend
Hilda O’Neil, and more explicitly, with fuller
detail. I could fancy the sweet sympathy and
tender admonitions of the elder woman; and here, before
me, was the visible proof of how she had interpreted
the heart of the girl, at once so proud, so honest,
and so fearless in an emergency like this.
Had the sweet little Quakeress come
to the bedside of this suffering young stranger because
he was a fellow being, friendless, alone, and in need
of help and kindly care, or had she come because she
believed that June Jenrys possessed a heart whose
monitions might be trusted, and that the man she had
singled out from among many as the one man in the
world must be a man indeed?
Be this as it would, and whatever
the frame of mind in which she approached that white
cot at her niece’s side, I knew, by the lingering
touch upon the pale forehead, the deft, gentle, and
quite unconscious smoothing of the white counterpane
across his breast, that the pale, unknowing face had
won its way, and that what she took away from that
hospital ward was not the tenderly carried burden of
another’s interest and another’s anxiety,
but a personal interest and a personal liking that
could be trusted to sustain itself and grow apace
in that tender woman’s heart.
We were a very silent party as we
came away from the hospital. June Jenrys looked
as if the word ‘heartless’ were yet sounding
in her ears. I was assuring myself that it was
best not to speak of what the surgeon had told me,
and the little Quakeress was evidently quite lost
to herself in her thoughts of, and for, others.
As I took my leave of them, Miss Ross put out her
hand, and, after thanking me for my escort, said:
’I will not trouble thee to
accompany me to-morrow; I know the way perfectly,
and can go very well by myself. Indeed I prefer
to do so. I shall not even let June here accompany
me at first.’