Count Bindo’s retreat near Winchester
proved to be a small, rather isolated house near Kingsworthy.
It stood in its own grounds, surrounded by a high
wall, and at the rear was a very fair garage, that
had been specially constructed, with inspection-pit
and the various appliances.
The house was rather well furnished,
but the only servant was a man, who turned out to
be none other than the yellow-haired young fellow who
had been introduced to me at the Cecil as “Mr.
Henderson.”
He no longer wore the light fancy
vest and smartly-cut clothes, but was in a somewhat
shabby suit of black. He smiled grimly as I recognised
him, while his master said
“Got back all right, Henderson eh?”
“I arrived only ten minutes ago, sir. All
was quiet, wasn’t it?”
“Absolutely,” replied
the Count, who then went upstairs, and I saw him no
more that evening.
For nearly a fortnight the car remained
in the garage. It now bore a different identification-plate,
and to kill time, I idled about, wondering when we
should start again. It was a strange ménage.
Count Bindo was a very easy-going cosmopolitan, who
treated both Henderson and myself as intimates, inasmuch
as we ate at table with him, and smoked together each
evening.
We were simply waiting. The papers
were, of course, full of the clever theft from Gilling’s,
and the police, it appeared, were doing their utmost
to track the tricksters but in vain.
The Count, under the name of Mr. Claude Fielding,
seemed to be very popular in the neighbourhood, though
he discouraged visitors. Indeed, no one came there.
He dined, however, at several houses during the second
week of his concealment, and seemed to be quite confident
of his safety.
At last we left, but not, however,
before Sir Charles Blythe had stayed one night with
us and made some confidential report to his friend.
It being apparent that all was clear, some further
alteration was made both in the appearance of the
car and in the personal aspect of Count Bindo and
myself, after which we started for the Continent by
way of Southampton.
We crossed and ran up to Paris, where
we stayed at the Ritz. The Count proved a devil-may-care
fellow, with plenty of friends in the French capital.
When with the latter he treated me as a servant; when
alone as a friend.
Whatever the result of the clever
piece of trickery in Bond Street, it was quite clear
that my employer was in funds, for he spent freely,
dined and supped at the expensive restaurants, and
thoroughly enjoyed himself with his chums.
We left Paris, and went on the broad
good road to Lyons and to Monte Carlo. It was
just before Christmas, and the season had, of course,
not yet commenced. We stayed at the Hotel de
Paris the hotel where most men en garcon
put up and the car I put into the Garage
Meunier.
It was the first time I had seen “Monty,”
and it attracted me, as it does every man and woman.
Here, too, Bindo di Ferraris seemed to have hosts
of friends. He dined at the Grand, the Metropole,
or the Riviera Palace, and supped each night at Ciro’s,
indulging in a little mild play in the Rooms in the
interval between the two meals.
He did not often go out in the car,
but frequently went to Nice and Cannes by train.
About a fortnight after our arrival, however, we ran,
one bright morning, along the lower road by Beaulieu
to Nice bad, by the way, on account of
the sharp corners and electric trams and
called at a small hotel in the Boulevard Gambetta.
The Count apparently had an appointment
with a tall, dark-haired, extremely good-looking young
French girl, with whom he lunched at a small restaurant,
and afterwards he walked for an hour on the Promenade,
talking with her very earnestly.
She was not more than nineteen a
smart, very chic little Parisienne, quietly
dressed in black, but in clothes that bore unmistakably
the cachet of a first-class dressmaker.
They took a turn on the Jetee Promenade, and presently
returned to the hotel, when the Count told her to
go and get a close hat and thick coat, and he would
wait for her.
Then, when she had gone, he told me
that we were about to take her over to the Bristol
at Beaulieu, that great white hotel that lies so sheltered
in the most delightful bay of the whole Riviera.
It was a clear, bright December afternoon.
The roads were perfect, though dusty as the Corniche
always is, and very soon, with the Count and his lady
friend, I swung into the curved drive before the hotel.
“You can go to the garage for
an hour or so, Ewart,” my employer said, after
they had descended. Therefore I turned the car
and went to the huge garage at the rear of the hotel the
garage which every motorist on the Riviera knows so
well.
After an hour I re-entered the hotel
to look for the Count and receive orders, when I saw,
in the great red-carpeted lounge, my employer and
the little Parisienne seated with the man whom
I knew as Sir Charles Blythe, but who really was one
of Count Bindo’s confederates.
We exchanged glances, and his was
a meaning one. That some deep and ingenious game
was in progress I felt certain, but what it was I had
no idea.
Blythe was smartly dressed in a grey
flannel suit and white shoes the costume
de rigueur on the Riviera and as
he smoked his cigar, easily reclining in the wicker
lounge-chair, he presented the complete picture of
the English aristocrat “putting in” a month
or two for sunshine.
Both men were talking earnestly in
French with the dark-eyed little lady, who now and
then laughed, or, raising her shoulders, looked from
one to the other and protruded her chin in a gesture
of uncertainty.
I retired and watched closely.
It was quite plain in a few moments that the young
lady was entirely devoted to the handsome Bindo.
Both manner and glances betrayed it. I saw him
look at Blythe, and knew that they were working in
accord towards some prearranged end.
Presently a noisy party of American
girls who had just returned from “Monty”
entered and sat close to them, calling for tea.
Therefore the trio rose and went out into the evening
dusk. They wished, it seemed, to talk in private,
and they did so until, half an hour later, I received
orders to bring round the car, and drove them all three
back to Nice, which we reached in plenty of time for
dinner.
“Now, you will not forget, Gabrielle?
You’re sure?” said Bindo in French as
he handed her out of the car and shook her hand as
he bared his head.
“I have promised, m’sieur,”
was her reply in a low, rather musical voice.
“I shall not forget.”
And then she bowed to Blythe, ascended
the steps, and disappeared into the hotel.
Her quietness and neatness of dress
were, to me, attractive. She was a dainty little
thing, and yet her plain black dress, so well cut,
was really very severe. She had the manner of
a lady, sweet and demure. The air of the woman-of-the-world
was, somehow, entirely absent.
Well, to confess it, I found myself
admiring her very much. She was, I thought, delightful one
of the prettiest, sweetest girls I had ever seen.
Evidently our run to Beaulieu and
back was her first experience of motoring, for she
laughed with girlish delight when, on an open piece
of road here and there, I put on a “move.”
And as she disappeared into the hotel she turned and
waved her tiny black-gloved hand back at the handsome
Bindo.
“Done, my dear chap!”
chuckled Blythe in a low voice to his companion as
the neat figure disappeared behind the glass swing-doors.
“The rest is easy if we keep up pluck.”
“It’s a big thing, of
course; but I’m sanguine enough,” declared
my employer. “That little girl is a perfect
brick. She’s entirely unsuspicious.
Flatter and court a woman, and if she falls in love
with you she’ll go any length to serve you!”
“You’re a splendid lover!”
declared Sir Charles as he mounted into the car beside
the Count, while the latter, laughing lightly, bent
to me, saying
“Back to Monte Carlo, as quick as we can get.”
I slipped along out of Nice, through
Villefranche, round Beaulieu, slowing up for the corners,
but travelling sharply on the open road, and we were
soon back at the Paris.
Having put the car into the garage,
I walked round to the hotel, transformed myself from
a leather-coated chauffeur into a Monte Carlo lounger,
and just before ten o’clock met the Count going
across the flower-scented Place to the Rooms.
He was alone, and, recognising me, crossed and said
“Ewart, let’s walk up
through the gardens. I want to have a word with
you.”
I turned on my heel, and strolled with him.
“You know what we’ve done
to-day eh? You stand in, so you can
just shut your eyes to anything that isn’t exactly
in order understand? There’s
a big thing before us a very big thing a
thing that’s simply dropped from the clouds.
You want money, so do I. We all want money. Just
keep a still tongue, and obey my orders, and you’ll
see that we’ll bring off the biggest coup
that the Riviera has yet known.”
“I know how to be silent,”
I said, though I did not at all like the aspect of
affairs.
“Yes, you do. I give you
credit for that. One word of this and I go to
durance vile. Silence, and the whole of us profit
and get the wherewithal to live. I often think,
Ewart, that the public, as they call it the
British public are an extraordinary people.
They are so confoundedly honest. But, nowadays,
there surely isn’t any honesty in life at
least, I’ve never found any. Why, your honest
business man who goes to church or chapel each Sunday,
and is a model of all the virtues, is, in the City,
the very man who’ll drive a hard bargain, pay
a starvation wage, and button his pockets against
the widow! Who are your successful men in business?
Why, for the most part, the men who, by dint of sharp
practice or unscrupulousness, have been able to get
in front of their competitors. Therefore, after
all, am I very much worse than the successful City
man? I live on my brains and I’m
happy to say I’ve lived very well up
to the present. But enough of this philosophy,”
laughed the easy-going young scoundrel. “I
want to give you instructions. You stand in with
us, Ewart. Your share of the Gilling affair is
to your credit, and you’ll have it before long.
At present, we have another little matter in hand one
which requires extremely delicate handling, but will
be successful providing Mademoiselle Gabrielle doesn’t
change her mind. But women are so often fickle,
and the morning brings prudence far too frequently.
You’ll see some strange happenings to-morrow
or the next day. Keep your eyes and ears closed;
that’s all you have to do. You understand eh?”
“Perfectly,” was my reply,
for my curiosity was now thoroughly whetted.
There was a desperate project in the
air, and the spirit of adventure had now entered thoroughly
into me.
Early next morning I drove the Count
back to Nice, where, at a quiet spot beyond the Magnan,
he met the pretty Gabrielle clandestinely.
When we drew up to where she was apparently
awaiting us, I saw that she was annoyed at my presence.
“Ewart, my chauffeur,”
he explained, introducing me, “will say nothing
about this meeting. He knows how to be discreet.”
I raised my peaked motor-cap, as our
eyes met. I thought I detected a curiously timid
glance in them, for in an instant she dropped her gaze.
That she was an intimate friend of
the Count was shown by the instructions he gave her.
“You two walk along the Promenade
des Anglais, and I’ll meet you at the other
end, by the Hotel Suisse. I’ll take the
car myself on to the garage.”
This meant that I was to walk with
her a full three-quarters of an hour along the whole
of the beautiful sea-front of Nice. Why?
I wondered.
“But, Bindo, can’t you come?”
“I’ll meet you outside
the Suisse. It’s better to do that,”
was his answer. “Go along; you’ll
find Ewart a clever fellow. He’ll tell you
how to drive a motor-car.”
She laughed lightly, and then, as
Bindo mounted into the car again and turned away,
we strolled together on the broad asphalte back
towards the town.
The morning was delightful, with bright
sunshine and blue sea. The sweet-smelling wallflowers
were already out, and the big palms waved lazily in
the soft breeze.
I quickly found my companion most
charming, and envied the Count his acquaintanceship.
Was she marked down as a victim? Or was she an
accomplice? I could not grasp the motive for being
sent to walk the whole length of the Promenade with
her. But the Count and his companions were, they
admitted, working a “big thing,” and this
was part of it, I supposed.
“This is the first time you
have been in Nice, eh?” she asked in her pretty
broken English as she stopped a moment to open her
sunshade.
“Yes,” I answered; “but
the Count is an old habitue, I believe?”
“Oh yes,” she laughed;
“he knows everybody. Last year he was on
the Fêtes Committee and one of the judges at the Battle
of Flowers.”
And so we gossiped on, walking leisurely,
and passing many who, like ourselves, were idling
in the winter sunshine.
There was an air of refined ingenuousness
about her that was particularly attractive. She
walked well, holding her skirt tightly about her as
only a true Parisienne can, and displaying a pair
of extremely neat ankles. She inquired about
me how long had I been in the Count’s
service, how I liked him, and such-like; while I, by
careful questioning, discovered that her name was
Gabrielle Deleuse, and that she came to the Cote d’Azur
each season.
Just as we were opposite the white
façade of the Hotel Westminster we encountered a short,
rather stout, middle-aged lady, accompanied by a tall,
thin, white-haired gentleman. They were well dressed,
the lady wearing splendid sables.
My companion started when she recognised
them, instantly lowering her sunshade in order to
hide her face. Whether the pair noticed her I
cannot say. I only know that, as soon as they
passed, she exclaimed, in annoyance
“I can’t think why Bindo sent you along
here with me.”
“I regret, mademoiselle, that
my companionship should be distasteful to you,”
I replied, mystified.
“No, no, not that, m’sieur,”
she cried anxiously. “I do not mean that.
You do not know how can you know what I
mean?”
“You probably mean that you
ought not to be seen walking here, on the Promenade
des Anglais, with a common chauffeur.”
“If you are a chauffeur, m’sieur,
you are also a gentleman,” she said, looking
straight into my face.
“I thank mademoiselle for her
high compliment,” I said, bowing, for really
I was in no way averse to a little mild flirtation
with such a delightful companion. And yet what,
I wondered, was my rôle in this latest piece
of complicated trickery?
She quickened her pace, glancing anxiously
at everyone we met, as though wishing to arrive at
the end of our walk.
I was sorry our little chat was drawing
to a close. I would like to have had her at my
side for a day’s run on the car, and I told her
so.
“Perhaps you will take me for
a long trip one day who knows?” she
laughed. “Yesterday it was perfect.”
A few moments later we arrived before
the Suisse, and from a seat on the Promenade Count
Bindo rose to greet us. He had left his motor-coat
and cap in the car, and stood before us in his grey
flannels and white soft felt hat a smart,
handsome figure, such as women mostly admire.
Indeed, Bindo was essentially a lady’s man,
for he seemed to have a bowing acquaintance with hundreds
of the fair sex.
“Well, Gabrielle, and has Ewart
been saying lots of pretty things to you eh?”
“How unkind of you!” she
protested, blushing slightly. “You really
ought not to say such things.”
“Well, well, forgive me, won’t
you?” said the Count quickly; and together we
strolled into the town, where we had an aperatif
at the gay Cafe de l’Opera, opposite the public
gardens.
Here, however, a curious contretemps occurred.
She accidently upset her glass of
“Dubonnet” over her left hand, saturating
her white glove so that she was compelled to take it
off.
“Why!” ejaculated the
Count in sudden amazement, pointing to her uncovered
hand. “What does that mean?”
She wore upon her finger a wedding ring!
Her face went crimson. For a
moment the pretty girl was too confused to speak.
“Ah!” she cried in a low,
earnest tone, as she bent towards him. “Forgive
me, Bindo. I I did not tell you.
How could I?”
“You should have told me.
It was your duty to tell me. Remember, we are
old friends. How long have you been married?”
“Only three weeks. This is my honeymoon.”
“And your husband?”
“Four days ago business took him to Genoa.
He is still absent.”
“And, in the meanwhile, you
meet me, and are the merry little Gabrielle of the
old days eh?” remarked Bindo, placing
both elbows upon the marble-topped table and looking
straight into her face.
“Do you blame me, then?”
she asked. “I admit that I deceived you,
but it was imperative. Our encounter has brought
back all the past those summer days of
two years ago when we met at Fontainebleau. Do
you still remember them?” Her eyelids trembled.
I saw that, though married, she still
regarded the handsome Bindo with a good deal of affection.
“I don’t blame you,”
was his soft reply. “I suppose it is what
anybody else would have done in the circumstances.
Do I remember those days, you ask? Why, of course
I do. Those picnics in the forest with you, your
mother, and your sister Julie were delightful days days
never to return, alas! And so you are really
married! Well, you must tell me all about it
later. Let’s lunch together at the London
House.” Then he added reflectively, “Well,
this really is a discovery my little Gabrielle
actually married! I had no idea of it.”
She laughed, blushing again.
“No; I don’t suppose you
had. I was very, very foolish to take off my
glove, yet if I had kept up the deception any longer
I might perhaps have compromised myself.”
“Was it not well,
a little risky of you to go to Beaulieu with me yesterday?”
“Yes. I was foolish very
foolish, Bindo. I ought not to have met you to-day.
I ought to have told you the truth from the very first.”
“Not at all. Even if your
husband is away, there is surely no reason why you
should not speak to an old friend like myself, is there?”
“Yes; I’m known in Nice, as you are well
aware.”
“Known as the prettiest woman
who comes on the Riviera,” he declared, taking
her hand and examining the wedding ring and the fine
circle of diamonds above it. Bindo di Ferraris
was an expert in gems.
“Don’t be a flatterer,”
she protested, with a light laugh. “You’ve
said that, you know, hundreds of times before.”
“I’ve said only what’s
the truth, and I’m sure Ewart will bear me out.”
“I do, most certainly.
Madame is most charming,” I asserted; and it
was undoubtedly my honest opinion. I was, however,
disappointed equally with the Count to discover that
my dainty divinity in black was married. She
was certainly not more than nineteen, and had none
of the self-possessed air of the matron about her.
Twice during that conversation I had
risen to go, but the Count bade me stay, saying with
a laugh
“There is nothing in this that
you may not hear. Madame has deceived us both.”
He treated the situation as a huge
joke, yet I detected that the deception had annoyed
him. Had the plans he had laid been upset by this
unexpected discovery of the marriage? From his
demeanour of suppressed chagrin I felt sure they had
been.
Suddenly he glanced at his watch,
and then taking from his pocket an envelope containing
some small square hard object, about two inches long
by one inch broad, he said
“Go to the station and meet
the twelve-fifteen from Beaulieu to Cannes. You’ll
find Sir Charles Blythe in the train. Give him
this from me, and say that I’ll meet him at
the Beau Site at Cannes at four o’clock.
Have the car ready at two. I’ll come to
the garage. You haven’t much time to spare,
so take a cab.”
I rose, raised my hat to the dark-eyed
little woman, who bowed gracefully and then, mounting
into a fiacre, drove rapidly up the Avenue
de la Gare.
The situation was decidedly interesting.
My ideal of that sunny morning had been shattered.
Gabrielle of the luminous eyes was already a wife.
I met the train, and discovered Sir
Charles looking out for me. I handed him the
packet, and gave him the Count’s message.
I noticed that he had some light luggage with him,
and presumed that he was moving from Beaulieu to Cannes to
the tea-and-tennis Beau Site.
Then, when the train had moved off,
I wandered across to a small restaurant opposite the
station, and lunched alone, thinking and wondering
about the dainty little girl-wife who had so completely
fascinated me.
That she was still in love with Bindo
was quite clear, yet he, on his part, was distinctly
annoyed at being deceived.
At two o’clock, almost punctually,
he entered the garage, flung his hat into the car,
put on his cap, goggles, and motor-coat, and without
a word I drew the forty “Napier” out into
the road.
“To Cannes quick!”
he snapped. “Round to the right into the
Rue Magnan, then straight along. You saw Blythe?”
“Yes; I gave him the packet and the message.”
“Good! then we haven’t
any time to lose. Get a move on her whenever you
can.”
On we flew, as fast as the sharp corners
would allow, until presently we slipped down the long
hill into Cannes, and passing through the town, pulled
up at the Beau Site, where we found Sir Charles awaiting
us.
The latter had changed his clothes,
and was now in a smart blue serge suit, and was idly
smoking a cigar as we swept round to the entrance.
The two men met enthusiastically,
some words were exchanged in an undertone, and both
burst out laughing a laugh of triumph.
Was it at the expense of poor little Gabrielle?
I was left outside to mind the car,
and waited for fully an hour and a half. The
wind blew bitterly cold at sundown, as it always does
on the Riviera in December, and I was glad of my big
fur coat.
Whatever was the subject of discussion
it was evidently a weighty one. Both men had
gone to Blythe’s room and were closeted there.
A little after five Blythe came out,
hailed a cab, and drove away into the town; while
the Count, whose appearance was so entirely changed
that I scarcely knew him, sauntered slowly down the
hall after his friend. Blythe had evidently brought
him some fresh clothes from Monte Carlo, and he had
used his room as a dressing-room. He looked very
much older, and the dark-brown suit he now wore was
out of shape and ill-fitting. His hair showed
grey over the ears, and he wore gold spectacles.
Instantly I saw that the adventurous
scheme was still in progress, so I descended and lit
the big head-lights. About a dozen idlers were
in the vicinity of the car, and in sight of them all,
he struggled into his big motor-coat, and entering,
gave me orders to drive into the centre of the town.
Then, after we had got clear of the hotel, he said
“Stop at the station; we have to pick up Blythe.”
Directed by him, we were soon at the spot where Sir
Charles awaited us.
“I’ve got it!” he
exclaimed in a low voice as he took out a big coat,
motor-cap, and goggles. “Quick work, wasn’t
it?”
“Excellent!” declared
the Count, and then, bending to me, he added, “Round
there to the left. The high road is a little farther
on to Marseilles!”
“To Marseilles?” I echoed,
surprised that we were going so far as a hundred odd
miles, but at that moment I saw the wide highway and
turned into it, and with our big search-lights throwing
a white radiance on the road, I set the car westward
through St. Raphael and Les Arcs. It commenced
to rain, with a biting wind, and turned out a very
disagreeable night; but, urged on by both men, I went
forward at as quick a pace as I dared go on that road,
over which I had never before travelled.
At Toulon we pulled up for a drink for
by that time we were all three chilled to the bone,
notwithstanding our heavy leather-lined coats.
Then we set out again for Marseilles, which we reached
just after one o’clock in the morning, drawing
up at the Louvre et Paix, which every visitor to the
capital of Southern France knows so well. Here
we had a good hearty meal of cold meat and bock.
Prior, however, to entering Marseilles, we had halted,
changed our identification-plate, and made certain
alterations, in order more thoroughly to disguise the
car.
After supper we all got in again,
and Bindo directed me up and down several long streets
until we were once more in the suburbs. In a quiet,
unfrequented road we pulled up, where from beneath
the dark shadow of a wall a man silently approached
us.
I could not distinguish his face in
the darkness, but from his voice I knew it was none
other than Henderson, the servant from Kingsworthy.
“Wait here for half an hour.
Then run the car back to that church I pointed out
to you as we came along. The one at the top of
the Cannebiere. Wait for us there. We shall
be perhaps an hour, perhaps a little more,”
said the Count, taking a stick from the car, and then
the trio disappeared into the darkness.
Fully an hour elapsed, until at length,
along in the shadow the three crept cautiously, each
bearing a heavy bundle, wrapped in black cloth, which
they deposited in the car. The contents of the
bundles chinked as they were placed upon the floor.
What their booty was I knew not.
Next instant, however, all three were
in, the door was closed, and I drew off into the dark
open road straight before me out into the
driving rain.
The Count, who was at my side, seemed
panting and agitated.
“We’ve brought it off
all right, Ewart,” he whispered, bending to me
a few minutes later. “In behind, there’s
over twenty thousand pounds’ worth of jewellery
for us to divide later on. We must get into Valence
for breakfast, and thence Henderson will take the stuff
away by train into Holland.”
“But how what have you done?”
I asked, puzzled.
“I’ll explain in the morning, when we’ve
got rid of it all.”
He did explain. Blythe and Henderson
both left us at Valence with the booty, while Bindo
and myself, in the morning sunshine, went forward at
an easy pace along the Lyons road.
“The affair wanted just a little
bit of delicate manoeuvring,” he explained.
“It was an affair of the heart, you see.
We knew that the pretty little Gabrielle had married
old Lemaire, the well-known jeweller in the Cannebiere,
in Marseilles, and that she had gone to spend her
honeymoon at Nice. Unknown to either, I took a
room next theirs at the hotel, and, thanks to the
communicating doors they have in foreign hotels, overheard
her husband explain that he must go to Genoa on pressing
business. He also left her his safe-keys the
duplicates of those held by his manager in Marseilles with
injunctions to keep them locked in her trunk.
I allowed him to be absent a couple of days, then,
quite unexpectedly, I met her on the Promenade, pretending,
of course, that I was entirely unaware of her marriage
with old Lemaire. In case of accident, however,
it was necessary that the little woman should be compromised
with somebody, and as you were so discreet, I sent
you both yesterday morning to idle along the whole
length of the Promenade. In the meantime, I nipped
back to the hotel, entered Gabrielle’s room,
obtained the two safe-keys, and took impressions of
them in wax. These I put into a tin matchbox
and sent them by you to Blythe at the station.
Blythe, with his usual foresight, had already engaged
a locksmith in Cannes, telling him a little fairy-story
of how he had lost his safe-keys, and how his manager
in London, who had duplicates, had sent him out impressions.
The keys were made to time; Blythe took a cab from
the hotel, and got them, rejoined us at Cannes station,
and then we went on to Marseilles. There the
affair became easier, but more risky. Henderson
had already been reconnoitring the shop for a week
and had conceived a clever plan by which we got in
from the rear, quickly opened the two big safes with
the copied keys, and cleared out all old Lemaire’s
best stock. I’m rather sorry to have treated
little Gabrielle so but, after all, it
really doesn’t hurt her, for old Lemaire is very
rich, and he won’t miss twenty thousand pounds
as much as we’re in need of it. The loving
husband is still in Genoa, and poor little Gabrielle
is no doubt thinking herself a fool to have so prematurely
shown her wedding ring.”