 15. The Sergeant remained silent, thinking his own thoughts, till we entered the plantation of furs which led to the quicksand. There he roused himself, like a man whose mind was made up, and spoke to me again. Mr. Betteridge, he said, as you have honoured me by taking an oar in my boat, and as you may, I think, be of some assistance to me before the evening is out, I see no use in our mystifying one another any longer, and I propose to set you an example of plain speaking on my side. You are determined to give me no information to the prejudice of Rosanna Spearman, because she has been a good girl to you, and because you pity her heartily. Those humane considerations do you a world of credit, but they happen in this instance to be humane considerations clean thrown away. Rosanna Spearman is not in the slightest danger of getting into trouble. No, not if I fix her with being concerned in the disappearance of the diamond, on evidence which is as plain as the nose on your face. Do you mean that my lady won't prosecute? I asked. I mean that your lady can't prosecute, said the Sergeant. Rosanna Spearman is simply an instrument in the hands of another person, and Rosanna Spearman will be held harmless for that person's sake. He spoke like a man in earnest, there was no denying that. Still, I felt something stirring uneasily against him in my mind. Can't you give that other person a name, I said? Can't you, Mr. Bediridge? No. Sergeant Cuff stood stock still and surveyed me with a look of melancholy interest. It's always a pleasure to me to be tender towards human infirmity, he said. I feel particularly tender at the present moment, Mr. Bediridge, towards you, and you, with the same excellent motive, feel particularly tender towards Rosanna Spearman, don't you? Do you happen to know whether she has had a new outfit of linen lately? What he meant by slipping in this extraordinary question unawares, I was at a total loss to imagine. Seeing no possible injury to Rosanna if I own the truth, I answered that the girl had come to us rather sparingly provided with linen, and that my lady, in recompense for her good conduct, I laid a stress on her good conduct, had given her a new outfit not a fortnight since. This is a miserable world, says the Sergeant. Human life, Mr. Bediridge, is a sort of target. Miss Fortune is always firing at it and always hitting the mark. But for that outfit we should have discovered a new nightgown or petticoat among Rosanna's things, and have nailed her in that way. You're not at a loss to follow me, are you? You have examined the servants yourself, and you know what discoveries two of them made outside Rosanna's door. Surely you know what the girl was about yesterday after she was taken ill? You can't guess? Oh, dear me, it's as plain as that strip of light there at the end of the trees. At eleven on Thursday morning, Superintendent Seagrave, who is a massive human infirmity, points out to all the women servants the Smear on the door. Rosanna has her own reasons for suspecting her own things. She takes the first opportunity of getting to her room, finds the paint stain on her nightgown or petticoat or what not, shams ill and slips away to the town, gets the materials for making a new petticoat or nightgown, makes it alone in her room. On the Thursday night lights a fire, not to destroy it, two of her fellow servants are prying outside her door, and she knows better than to make a smell of burning, and to have a lot of tinder to get rid of. Lights a fire, I say, to dry and iron the substitute dress after wringing it out, keeps the stain dress hidden, probably on her, and is at this moment occupied in making a way with it in some convenient place on that lonely bit of beach ahead of us. I have traced her this evening to your fishing village and to one particular cottage, which we may possibly have to visit before we go back. She stopped in the cottage for some time, and she came out with, as I believe, something hidden under her cloak. A cloak, on a woman's back, is an emblem of charity. It covers a multitude of sins. I saw her set off northwards along the coast, after leaving the cottage. Is your seashore here considered a fine specimen of marine landscape, Mr. Better-Edge? I answered yes, as shortly as might be. Taste differ, says Sergeant Cuff. Looking at it from my point of view, I never saw a marine landscape that I admired less. If you happen to be following another person along your sea coast, and if that person happens to look round, there isn't a scrap of cover to hide you anywhere. I had to choose between taking Rosanna in custody on suspicion or leaving her for the time being, with her little game in her own hands. For reasons which I won't trouble you with, I decided on making any sacrifice, rather than give the alarm as soon as tonight to a certain person who will be nameless between us. I came back to the house to ask you to take me to the north end of the beach by another way. Sand, in respect of its printing off people's footsteps, is one of the best detective officers I know. If we don't meet with Rosanna Spearman by coming round on her in this way, the sand may tell us where she has been at, if the light only lasts long enough. Here is the sand. If you excuse my suggesting it, suppose you hold your tongue and let me go first. If there is such a thing known at the doctor's shop as a detective fever, that disease had now got fast-hulled of your humble servant. Sergeant Cuff went on between the hillocks of sand down to the beach. I followed him with my heart and my mouth, and waited at a little distance for what was to happen next. As it turned out, I found myself standing nearly in the same place where Rosanna Spearman and I had been talking together when Mr. Franklin suddenly appeared before us, on arriving at our house from London. While my eyes were watching the sergeant, my mind wandered away in spite of me to what had passed on that former occasion between Rosanna and me. I declare I almost felt the poor thing slip her hand again into mine, and give it a little grateful squeeze to thank me for speaking kindly to her. I declare I almost heard her voice telling me again that the shivering sand seemed to draw her to it against her own will whenever she went out, almost saw her face brightened again as it brightened when she first set eyes upon Mr. Franklin coming briskly out on us from among the hillocks. My spirits fell lower and lower as I thought of these things, and the view of the lonesome little bay when I looked about to rouse myself only served to make me feel more uneasy still. The last of the evening light was fading away, and over all the desolate place there hung a still and awful calm. The heave of the main ocean on the great sand bank out in the bay was a heave that made no sound. The inner sea lay lost and dim, without a breath of wind to stir it. Patches of nasty ooze floated yellow-white on the dead surface of the water, scum and slime shown faintly in certain places, where the last of the light still caught them on the two great spits of rock jutting out north and south into the sea. It was now the time of the turn of the tide, and even as I stood there waiting, the broad brown face of the quicksand began to dimple and quiver the only moving thing in all the hard place. I saw the sergeant start as the shiver of the sand caught his eye. After looking at it for a minute or so he turned and came back to me. I treacherous place, Mr. Betteridge, he said, and no signs of Rosanna Spearman anywhere on the beach. Look where you may. He took me down lower on the shore, and I saw for myself that his footsteps and mine were the only footsteps printed off on the sand. How does the fishing village bear, standing where we are now, asked Sergeant Cuff. Cobb's hole, I answered, that being the name of the place, bears as near as may be, due south. I saw the girl this evening walking northward along the shore from Cobb's hole, said the sergeant. Consequently, she must have been walking towards this place. Is Cobb's hole on the other side of that point of land there? And can we get to it? Now it's low water by the beach? I answered yes to both those questions. If you'll excuse my suggesting it, we'll step out briskly, said the sergeant. I want to find the place where she left the shore before it gets dark. We had walked, I should say, a couple of hundred yards towards Cobb's hole when Sergeant Cuff suddenly went down on his knees on the beach to all appearance ceased with a sudden frenzy for saying his prayers. There's something to be said for your marine landscape here, after all, remarked the sergeant. Here are a woman's footsteps, Mr. Betteridge. Let us call them Rosanna's footsteps until we find evidence to the contrary that we can't resist. Very confused footsteps. You are pleased to observe. Purposely confused, I should say. Ah, poor soul. She understands the detective virtues of sand as well as I do. But hasn't she been in rather too great a hurry to tread out the marks thoroughly? I think she has. Here's one footstep going from Cobb's hole, and here is another going back to it. Isn't that the toe of her shoe pointing straight to the water's edge? And don't I see two heel marks further down the beach, close at the water's edge also? I don't want to hurt your feelings, but I'm afraid Rosanna is sly. It looks as if she had determined to get to that place you and I have just come from without leaving any marks on the sand to trace her by. Shall we say that she walked through the water from this point till she got to that ledge of rocks behind us and came back the same way, and then took to the beach again where those two heel marks are still left? Yes, we'll say that. It seems to fit in with my notion that she had something under her cloak when she left the cottage. No, not something to destroy, for in that case where would have been the need for all these preparations to prevent my tracing the place at which her walk ended. Something to hide is, I think, the better guess of the two. Perhaps if we go on to the cottage we may find out what that something is. At this proposal my detective fever suddenly cooled. You don't want me, I said. What good can I do? The longer I know you, Mr. Better Edge, said the sergeant, the more virtues I discover. Modesty, oh, dear me, how rare modesty is in this world, and how much of that rarity you possess. If I go alone to the cottage, the people's tongues will be tied at the first question I put to them. If I go with you, I go introduced by a justly respected neighbor, and a flow of conversation is the necessary result. It strikes me in that light. How does it strike you? Not having an answer of the needful smartness as ready as I could have wished, I tried to gain time by asking him which cottage she wanted to go to. On the sergeant describing the place, I recognized it as a cottage inhabited by a fisherman named Yoland, with his wife and two grown-up children, a son and a daughter. If you will look back, you will find that, in first presenting Rosanna Spearman to your notice, I have described her as occasionally varying her walk to the shivering sand by a visit to some friends of hers at Cobbs Hole. Those friends were the Yolands, respectable, worthy people, a credit to the neighborhood. Rosanna's acquaintance with them had begun by means of the daughter who was afflicted with a misshapen foot and who was known in our parts by the name of Limping Lucy. The two deformed girls had, I suppose, a kind of fellow feeling for each other. Anyway, the Yolands and Rosanna always appeared to get on together at the few chances they had of meeting in a pleasant and friendly manner. The fact of Sergeant Cuff having traced the girl to their cottage set the matter of my helping his inquiries in quite a new light. Rosanna had merely gone where she was in the habit of going, and to show that she had been in company with the fisherman and his family was as good as to prove that she had been innocently occupied so far at any rate. It would be doing the girl a service, therefore, instead of an injury if I allowed myself to be convinced by Sergeant Cuff's logic. I professed myself convinced by it accordingly. We went on to Cobb's Hole, seeing the footsteps on the sand, as long as the light lasted. On reaching the cottage, the fisherman and his son proved to be out in the boat, and Limping Lucy, always weak and weary, was resting on her bed upstairs. Good Mrs. Yolands received us alone in her kitchen. When she heard that Sergeant Cuff was a celebrated character in London, she clapped a bottle of Dutch gin and a couple of clean pipes on the table, and stared as if she could never see enough of him. I sat quiet in a corner, waiting to hear how the Sergeant would find his way to the subject of Rosanna Spearman. His usual roundabout manner of going to work proved on this occasion to be more roundabout than ever. How he managed it is more than I could tell at the time, and more than I can tell now. But this is certain. He began with the royal family, the primitive Methodist, and the price of fish, and he got from that in his dismal underground way to the loss of the Moonstone, the spitefulness of our first housemaid, and the hard behavior of the women servants generally towards Rosanna Spearman. Having reached his subject in this fashion, he described himself as making his inquiries about the lost diamond, partly with a view to find it, and partly for the purpose of clearing Rosanna from the unjust suspicions of her enemies in the house. In about a quarter of an hour from the time when we entered the kitchen, Good Mrs. Yoland was persuaded that she was talking to Rosanna's best friend and was pressing Sergeant Kuff to comfort his stomach and revive his spirits out of the Dutch bottle. Being firmly persuaded that the sergeant was wasting his breast to no purpose on Mrs. Yoland, I sat enjoying the talk between them, much as I have sat in my time enjoying a stage play. The great Kuff showed a wonderful patience, trying his luck drearily this way and that way, and firing shot after shot as it were at random on the chance of hitting the mark. Everything to Rosanna's credit, nothing to Rosanna's prejudice, that was how it ended, try as he might, with Mrs. Yoland talking nineteen to the dozen and placing the most entire confidence in him. His last effort was made when we had looked at our watches and had got on our legs previous to taking leave. I shall now wish you good night, ma'am, says the sergeant, and I shall only say at parting that Rosanna Spearman has a sincere well-wisher in myself, your obedient servant. But oh, dear me, she will never get on in her present place, and my advice to her is leave it. Bless your heart alive, she is going to leave it, cries Mrs. Yoland. Notabene, I translate Mrs. Yoland out of the Yorkshire language into the English language, when I tell you that the all-complished Kuff was every now and then puzzle to understand her until I helped him, you will draw your own conclusions as to what your state of mind would be if I reported her in her native tongue. Rosanna Spearman going to leave us? I pricked up my ears at that. It seems strange to say the least of it that she should have given no warning in the first place to my lady or to me. A certain doubt came up in my mind whether Sergeant Kuff's last random shot might not have hit the mark. I began to question whether my share in the proceedings was quite as harmless a one as I had thought it. It might be all in the way of the sergeant's business to mystify an honest woman by wrapping her round in a network of lies, but it was my duty to have remembered as a good Protestant that the father of lies is the devil and that mischief and the devil are never far apart. Beginning to smell mischief in the air I tried to take Sergeant Kuff out. He sat down again instantly and asked for a little drop of comfort out of the Dutch bottle. Mrs. Yoland sat down opposite to him and gave him his nip. I went on to the door excessively uncomfortable and said I thought I must bid them good night and yet I didn't go. So she means to leave, says the sergeant. What is she to do when she does leave? Sad. Sad. The poor creature has got no friends in the world except you and me. Ah, but she has though, says Mrs. Yoland. She came in here as I told you this evening and after sitting and talking a little with my girl Lucy and me she asked to go upstairs by herself into Lucy's room. It's the only room in our place where there's pen and ink. I want to write a letter to a friend, she says, and I can't do it for the prying and peeping of the servants up at the house. Who the letter was written to I can't tell you. It must have been a mortal long one, judging by the time she stopped upstairs over it. I offered her a postage stamp when she came down. She had got the letter in her hand and she didn't accept the stamp. A little close, poor soul as you know, about herself and her doings. But a friend she has got somewhere I can tell you and to that friend you may depend upon it, she will go. Soon, asked the sergeant, as soon as she can, says Mrs. Yoland. Here I stepped in again from the door. As chief of my lady's establishment, I couldn't allow this sort of loose talk about a servant of ours going or not going to proceed any longer in my presence without noticing it. You must be mistaken about Rosanna Spearman, I said. If she had been going to leave her present situation, she would have mentioned it in the first place to me. Mistaken, cries Mrs. Yoland, why only an hour ago she brought some things she wanted for traveling of my own self, Mr. Betteridge, in this very room. And that reminds me, says the worrisome woman, suddenly beginning to feel in her pocket, of something I have got it on my mind to say about Rosanna and her money. Are you either of you likely to see her when you go back to the house? I'll take a message to the poor thing with the greatest pleasure, answered sergeant Cuff, before I could put in a word edgewise. Mrs. Yoland produced out of her pocket a few shillings and sixpences and counted them out with the most particular and exasperating carefulness in the palm of her hand. She offered the money to the sergeant, looking mighty loath to part with it all the while. Might I ask you to give this back to Rosanna with my love and respects? says Mrs. Yoland. She insisted on paying me for the one or two things she took a fancy to this evening, and money's welcome enough in our house. I don't deny it. Still, I'm not easy in my mind about taking the poor thing's little savings, and to tell you the truth, I don't think my man would like to hear that I had taken Rosanna Spearman's money when he comes back tomorrow morning from his work. Please say she's heartily welcome to the things she bought of me as a gift. And don't leave the money on the table, says Mrs. Yoland, putting it down suddenly before the sergeant, as if it burnt her fingers. Don't, there's a good man, for times are hard and flesh is weak, and I might be tempted to put it back in my pocket again. Come along, I said. I can't wait any longer. I must go back to the house. I'll follow you directly, says sergeant Cuff. For the second time I went to the door, and for the second time, try as I might, I couldn't cross the threshold. It's a delicate matter, ma'am. I heard the sergeant say, giving money back. You charged her cheap for the things, I'm sure. Cheap! says Mrs. Yoland. Come and judge for yourself. She took up the candle and led the sergeant to a corner of the kitchen. For the life of me I couldn't help following them. Shaking down in the corner was a heap of odds and ends, mostly old metal, which the fishermen had picked up at different times from wreck ships, and which he hadn't found a market for yet to his own mind. Mrs. Yoland dived into this rubbish, and brought up an old Japan tin case, with a cover to it, and a hasp to hang it up, by the sort of thing they use on board ship, for keeping their maps and charts and such like from the wet. There, she says, when Rosanna came in this evening, she bought the fellow to that. It will just do, she says, to put my cuffs and collars in, and keep them from being crumpled in my box. One in nine pence, Mr. Cuff, as I live by bread, not a half penny more. Dirt cheap! says the sergeant, with a heavy sigh. He weighed the case in his hand. I thought I heard a note or two of the last rows of summer as he looked at it. There was no doubt now, he had made another discovery to the prejudice of Rosanna Spearman, in the place of all others where I thought her character was safest, and all through me. I leave you to imagine what I felt, and how sincerely I repented having been the medium of introduction between Mrs. Yoland and Sergeant Cuff. That will do, I said, we really must go. Without paying the least attention to me, Mrs. Yoland took another dive into the rubbish, and came up out of it this time with a dog chain. Why it in your hands, sir, she said to the sergeant. We had three of these, and Rosanna has taken two of them. What can you want, my dear, with a couple of dog's chains, says I. If I join them together, they'll do round my box nicely, says she. Ropes cheapest, says I. Chains surest, says she. Who ever heard of a box courted with chains, says I. Oh, Mrs. Yoland, don't make objections, says she. Let me have my chains. A strange girl, Mr. Cuff, good as gold, and kinder than a sister to my Lucy, but always a little strange. There, I humoured her, three and six pence, on the word of an honest woman, three and six pence, Mr. Cuff. Each, says the sergeant, both together, says Mrs. Yoland, three and six pence for the two. Given away, ma'am, says the sergeant, shaking his head. Clean, given away. There's the money, says Mrs. Yoland, getting back sideways to the little heap of silver on the table, as if it drew her in spite of herself. The tin case and the dog chains were all she bought, and all she took away, one and nine pence, and three and six pence total, five and three. With my love and respects, and I can find it in my conscience to take a poor girl's savings, when she may want them herself. I can find it in my conscience, ma'am, to give the money back, says Sergeant Cuff. You have as good as made her a present of the things you have indeed. Is that your sincere opinion, sir? says Mrs. Yoland, brightening up wonderfully. There can't be a doubt about it, answered the sergeant, asked Mr. Bederidge. It was no use asking me. All they got out of me was good night. Father, the money, says Mrs. Yoland. With these words, she appeared to lose all command over herself, and making a sudden snatch of the heap of silver, put it back hull-as-bull-as in her pocket. It upsets one's temper, it does, to see it lying there, and nobody taking it. Christ this unreasonable woman, sitting down with a thump, and looking at Sergeant Cuff as much as to say, It's in my pocket again now. Get it out if you can. This time I not only went to the door, but went fairly out on the road back. Explain it how you may. I felt as if one or both of them had mortally offended me. Before I had taken three steps down the village, I heard the sergeant behind me. Thank you for your introduction, Mr. Bederidge. He said, I am indebted to the fisherman's wife for an entirely new sensation. Mrs. Yoland has puzzled me. It was on the tip of my tongue to have given him a sharp answer, for no better reason than this, that I was out of temper with him, because I was out of temper with myself. But when he owned to being puzzled, a comforting doubt crossed my mind, whether any great harm had been done after all, I waited in discreet silence to hear more. Yes, says the sergeant, as if he was actually reading my thoughts in the dark. Instead of putting me on the scent, it may console you to know, Mr. Bederidge, with your interest in Rosanna, that you have been the means of throwing me off. What the girl has done tonight is clear enough, of course. She has joined the two chains and has fastened them to the hasp in the tin case. She has sunk the case in the water or in the quicksand. She has made the loose end of the chain fast to some place under the rocks, known only to herself, and she will leave the case secure at its anchorage till the present proceedings have come to an end, after which she can privately pull it up again out of its hiding place at her own leisure and convenience, all perfectly plain so far. But, says the sergeant, with the first tone of impatience in his voice that I had heard yet, the mystery is what the devil has she hidden in the tin case. I thought to myself, the moonstone, but I only said to Sergeant Cuff, can't you guess? It's not the diamond, said Sergeant. The whole experience of my life is at fault if Rosanna Spearman has got the diamond. On hearing those words, the infernal detective fever began, I suppose, to burn in me again. At any rate, I forgot myself in the interest of guessing this new riddle, I said rashly, the stained dress. Sergeant Cuff stopped short in the dark and laid his hand on my arm. Is anything thrown in that quicksand of yours ever thrown up on the surface again? He asked. Never, I answered. Light or heavy, whatever goes into the shivering sand is sucked down and seen no more. Does Rosanna Spearman know that? She knows it as well as I do. Then, says the sergeant, what on earth has she got to do but to tie up a bit of stone in the stained dress and throw it into the quicksand? There isn't the shadow of a reason why she should have hidden it, and yet she must have hidden it. Query, says the sergeant, walking on again. Is the paint stained dress a petticoat or a nightgown? Or is it something else which there is a reason for preserving at any risk? Mr. Betteridge, if nothing occurs to prevent it, I must go to Frizzing Hall tomorrow and discover what she bought in the town when she privately got the materials for making the substitute dress. It's a risk to leave the house as things are now, but it's a worse risk still to stir another step in this matter in the dark. Excuse my being a little out of temper. I'm degraded in my own estimation. I have let Rosanna Spearman puzzle me. When we got back, the servants were at supper. The first person we saw in the outer yard was the policeman whom Superintendent Seagrave had left at the sergeant's disposal. The sergeant asked if Rosanna Spearman had returned. Yes. When? Nearly an hour since. What had she done? She had gone upstairs to take off her bonnet and cloak, and she was now at supper quietly with the rest. Without making any remark, Sergeant Cuff walked on, sinking lower and lower in his own estimation to the back of the house. Missing the entrance in the dark, he went on, in spite of my calling to him, till he was stopped by a wicket gate which led into the garden. When I joined him to bring him back by the right way, I found that he was looking up attentively at one particular window on the bedroom floor at the back of the house. Looking up in my turn, I discovered that the object of his contemplation was the window of Miss Rachel's room and that lights were passing backwards and forwards there as if something unusual was going on. Isn't that Miss Verringer's room? asked Sergeant Cuff. I replied that it was and invited him to go in with me to supper. The sergeant remained in his place and said something about enjoying the smell of the garden at night. I left him to his enjoyment, just as I was turning in at the door, I heard the last rose of summer at the wicket gate. Sergeant Cuff had made another discovery, and my young lady's window was at the bottom of it this time. The latter reflection took me back again to the sergeant with a plight intimation that I could not find it in my heart to leave him by himself. Is there anything you don't understand up there? I added, pointing to Miss Rachel's window. Judging by his voice, Sergeant Cuff had suddenly risen again to the right place in his own estimation. You are great people for betting in Yorkshire, are you not? he asked. Well, I said, suppose we are. If I was a Yorkshireman, proceeded the sergeant, taking my arm, I would lay you an even sovereign, Mr. Bitteridge, that your young lady has suddenly resolved to leave the house. If I won on that event, I should offer to lay another sovereign that the idea has occurred to her within the last hour. The first of the sergeant's guesses startled me. The second mixed itself up somehow in my head with the report we had heard from the policeman that Rosanna Spearman had returned from the sands within the last hour. The two together had a curious effect on me as we went into supper. I shook off Sergeant Cuff's arm and forgetting my manners pushed by him through the door to make my own inquiries for myself. Samuel, the footman, was the first person I met in the passage. Her ladyship is waiting to see you in Sergeant Cuff. He said, before I could put any questions to him, how long has she been waiting? asked the sergeant's voice behind me. For the last hour, sir. There it was again. Rosanna had come back. Miss Rachel had taken some resolution out of the common, and my lady had been waiting to see the sergeant all within the last hour. It was not pleasant to find these very different persons and things linking themselves together in this way. I went on upstairs without looking at Sergeant Cuff or speaking to him. My hand took a sudden fit of trembling as I lifted it to knock at my mistress's door. I shouldn't be surprised, whispered the sergeant over my shoulder, if a scandal was to burst up in the house tonight. Don't be alarmed. I have put the muzzle on worse family difficulties than this in my time. As he said the words, I heard my mistress's voice calling us to come in. CHAPTER XVI. We found my lady with no light in the room but the reading-lamp. The shade was screwed down so as to overshadow her face. Instead of looking up at us in her usual straightforward way, she sat close at the table and kept her eyes fixed obstinately on an open book. Officer, she said, is it important to the inquiry you are conducting to know beforehand if any person now in this house wishes to leave it? Most important, my lady. I have to tell you, then, that Miss Verinder proposes to stay with her aunt, Mrs. Abelwhite, of Frizzing Hall. She has arranged to leave us, the first thing to-morrow morning. Sergeant Cuff looked at me. I made a step forward as to speak to my mistress, and, feeling my heart fail me, if I must own it, took a step back again and said nothing. May I ask your ladyship when Miss Verinder informed you that she was going to her aunts, inquired the sergeant? About an hour since, answered my mistress. Sergeant Cuff looked at me once more. They say old people's hearts are not very easily moved. My heart couldn't have thumped much harder than it did now, if I had been five and twenty again. I have no claim, my lady, says the sergeant, to control Miss Verinder's actions. All I can ask you to do is to put off her departure, if possible, to later in the day. I must go to Frizzing Hall myself to-morrow morning, and I shall be back by two o'clock, if not before. If Miss Verinder can be kept here till that time, I should wish to say two words to her unexpectedly before she goes. My lady directed me to give the coachman her orders, that the carriage was not to come for Miss Rachel until two o'clock. Have you more to say? she asked of the sergeant when this had been done. Only one more thing, your ladyship. If Miss Verinder is surprised at this change in the arrangements, please not to mention me as being the cause of putting off her journey. My mistress lifted her head suddenly from her book, as if she was going to say something, checked herself by a great effort, and, looking back again at the open page, dismissed us with a sign of her hand. That's a wonderful woman, said sergeant Cuff, when we were out in the hall again. But for herself control, the mystery that puzzles you, Mr. Better Edge, would have been at an end to-night. At those words the truth rushed at last into my stupid old head. For a moment I suppose I must have gone clear out of my senses. I seized the sergeant by the collar of his coat and pinned him against the wall. Damn you, I cried. There's something wrong about Miss Rachel, and you have been hiding it from me all the time. Sergeant Cuff looked up at me, flat against the wall, without stirring a hand, or moving a muscle of his melancholy face. Ah, he said, you've guessed it at last. My hand dropped from his collar and my head sunk on my breast. Pleased to remember, as some excuse for my breaking out as I did, that I had served the family for fifty years. Miss Rachel had climbed upon my knees and pulled my whiskers, many and many a time when she was a child. Miss Rachel, with all her faults, had been, to my mind, the dearest and prettiest and best young mistress that ever an old servant waited on and loved. I beg Sergeant Cuff's pardon, but I am afraid I did it with watery eyes and not in a very becoming way. Don't distress yourself, Mr. Better Edge, says the sergeant, with more kindness than I had any right to expect from him. In my line of life, if we were quick at taking offence, we wouldn't be worth salt to our porridge. If it's any comfort to you, collar me again, you don't in the least know how to do it, but I'll overlook your awkwardness in consideration of your feelings. He curled up at the corners of his lips, and in his own dreary way seemed to think he had delivered himself of a very good joke. I led him into my own little sitting-room and closed the door. Tell me the truth, Sergeant, I said. What do you suspect? It's no kindness to hide it from me now. I don't suspect, said Sergeant Cuff. I know. My unlucky temper began to get the better of me again. Do you mean to tell me, in plain English, I said, that Miss Rachel has stolen her own diamond? Yes, says the sergeant. That is what I mean to tell you, in so many words. Miss Verinder has been in secret possession of the Moonstone from first to last, and she has taken Rosanna Spearman into her confidence, because she has calculated on our suspecting Rosanna Spearman of the theft. There is the whole case in a nutshell. Color me again, Mr. Betteridge. If it's any vent to your feelings, color me again. God help me. My feelings were not to be relieved in that way. Give me your reasons. That was all I could say to him. You shall hear my reasons, to-morrow, said the sergeant. If Miss Verinder refuses to put off her visit to her aunt, which you will find Miss Verinder will do, I shall be obliged to lay the whole case before your mistress to-morrow. And, as I don't know what may come of it, I shall request you to be present, and to hear what passes on both sides. Let the matter rest for to-night. No, Mr. Betteridge, you don't get a word more on the subject of the Moonstone out of me. There is your table, spread for supper. That's one of the many human infirmities which I always treat tenderly. If you will ring the bell, I'll say grace. For what we are about to receive. I wish you a good appetite to it, sergeant, I said. My appetite is gone. I'll wait and see you served, and then I'll ask you to excuse me if I go away, and try to get the better of this by myself. I saw him served with the best of everything, and I shouldn't have been sorry if the best of everything had choked him. The head gardener, Mr. Begbie, came in at that time with his weekly account. The sergeant got on the subject of roses and the merits of grass walks and gravel walks immediately. I left the two together, and went out with a heavy heart. This was the first trouble I remember for many a long year which wasn't to be blown off by a whiff of tobacco, and which was even beyond the reach of Robinson Crusoe. Being restless and miserable and having no particular room to go to, I took a turn on the terrace, and thought it over in peace and quietness by myself. It doesn't much matter what my thoughts were. I felt wretchedly old and worn out, and unfit for my place, and began to wonder, for the first time in my life, when it would please God to take me. With all this I held firm, notwithstanding, to my belief in Miss Rachel. If sergeant Cuff had been Solomon in all his glory, and had told me that my young lady had mixed herself up in a mean and guilty plot, I should have had but one answer for Solomon, wise as he was. You don't know her, and I do. My meditations were interrupted by Samuel. He brought me a written message from my mistress. Going into the house to get a light to read it by, Samuel remarked that there seemed a change coming in the weather. My troubled mind had prevented me from noticing it before. But now my attention was roused. I heard the dogs uneasy and the wind moaning low. Looking up at the sky I saw the rack of clouds getting blacker and blacker, and hurrying faster and faster over a watery moon. Wild weather coming. Samuel was right. Wild weather coming. The message from my lady informed me that the magistrate at Frizing Hall had written to remind her about the three Indians. Early in the coming week the rogues must needs be released, and left free to follow their own devices. If we had any more questions to ask them there was no time to lose. Having forgotten to mention this, when she had last seen Sergeant Cuff, my mistress now desired me to supply the omission. The Indians had gone clean out of my head, as they have, no doubt, gone clean out of yours. I didn't see much use in stirring that subject again. However, I obeyed my orders on the spot as a matter of course. I found Sergeant Cuff and the Gardener with a bottle of Scotch whiskey between them, head over ears in an argument on the growing of roses. The Sergeant was so deeply interested that he held up his hand and signed to me not to interrupt the discussion when I came in. As far as I could understand it the question between them was whether the white moss rose did or did not require to be butted on the dog rose to make it grow well. Mr. Begby said yes, and Sergeant Cuff said no. They appealed to me as hotly as a couple of boys. Knowing nothing whatever about the growing of roses I steered a middle course, just as Her Majesty's judges do, when the scales of justice bother them by hanging even to a hair. Gentlemen, I remarked, there is much to be said on those sides. In the temporary lull produced by that impartial sentence I laid my lady's written message on the table under the eyes of Sergeant Cuff. I had got by this time as nearly as might be to hate the Sergeant, but truth compels me to acknowledge that, in respect of readiness of mine, he was a wonderful man. In half a minute after he had read the message he had looked back into his memory for Superintendent Seagrave's report had picked out that part of it in which the Indians were concerned and was ready with his answer. A certain great traveller who understood the Indians and their language had figured in Mr. Seagrave's report hadn't he? Very well. Did I know the gentleman's name and address? Very well again. Would I write them on the back of my lady's message? Much obliged to me. Sergeant Cuff would look that gentleman up when he went to Frizing Hall in the morning. Do you expect anything to come of it? I asked. Superintendent Seagrave found the Indians as innocent as the babe unborn. Superintendent Seagrave has been proved wrong up to this time in all his conclusions, answered the Sergeant. It may be worthwhile to find out tomorrow whether Superintendent Seagrave was wrong about the Indians as well. With that he turned to Mr. Begbie and took up the argument again exactly at the place where it had left off. This question between us is a question of soils and seasons and patience and pains, Mr. Gardner. Now let me put it to you from another point of view. You take your white moss rows. By that time I had closed the door on them and was out of hearing of the rest of the dispute. In the passage I met Penelope hanging about and asked what she was waiting for. She was waiting for her young lady's bell when her young lady chose to call her back to go on with the packing for the next day's journey. Further inquiry revealed to me that Miss Rachel had given it as a reason for wanting to go to her aunt in Frizing Hall that the house was unendurable to her, that she could bear the odious presence of a policeman under the same roof with herself no longer. On being informed, half an hour since, that her departure would be delayed until two in the afternoon, she had flown into a violent passion. My lady, present at the time, had severely rebuked her and then, having apparently something to say which was reserved for her daughter's private ear, had sent Penelope out of the room. My girl was in wretchedly low spirits about the changed state of things in the house. Nothing goes right, father, nothing is like what it used to be. I feel as if some dreadful misfortune was hanging over us all. That was my feeling, too, but I put a good face on it before my daughter, Miss Rachel's bell rang while we were talking. Penelope ran up the back stairs to go on with the packing. I went by the other way to the hall to see what the glass said about the change in the weather. Just as I approached the swing door leading into the hall from the servant's offices, it was violently open from the other side, and Rosanna Spearman ran by me with a miserable look of pain in her face, and one of her hands pressed hard over her heart as if the pang was in that quarter. What's the matter, my girl? I asked, stopping her, are you ill? For God's sake, don't speak to me! she answered and twisted herself out of my hands and ran on towards the servant's staircase. I called to the cook who was within hearing to look after the poor girl. Two other persons proved to be within hearing, as well as the cook. Sergeant Cuff darted softly out of my room and asked what was the matter. I answered, nothing. Mr. Franklin on the other side pulled open the swing door and beckoning me into the hall inquired if I had seen anything of Rosanna Spearman. She has just passed me, sir, with a very disturbed face and in a very odd manner. I am afraid I am innocently the cause of that disturbance better edge. You, sir? I can't explain it, says Mr. Franklin, but if the girl is concerned in the loss of the diamond I do really believe she was on the point of confessing everything to me of all the people in the world, not two minutes since. Looking towards the swing door as he said those last words I fancied I saw it opened a little way from the inner side. Was there anybody listening? The door fell too before I could get to it. Looking through the moment after I thought I saw the tales of Sergeant Cuff's respectable black coat disappearing round the corner of the passage. He knew, as well as I did, that he could expect no more help from me now that I had discovered the turn in which his investigations were really taking. Under those circumstances it was quite in his character to help himself and to do it by the underground way. Not feeling sure that I had really seen the Sergeant and not desiring to make needless mischief where Heaven knows there was mischief enough already going on, I told Mr. Franklin that I thought one of the dogs had gotten to the house and then begged him to describe what had happened between Rosanna and himself. Were you passing through the hall, sir? I asked. Did you meet her accidentally when she spoke to you? Mr. Franklin pointed to the billiard-table. I was knocking the balls about, he said, and trying to get this miserable business of the diamond out of my mind I happened to look up and there stood Rosanna Spearman at the side of me like a ghost. Her stealing on me in that way was so strange that I hardly knew what to do at first. Seeing a very anxious expression in her face I asked her if she wished to speak to me. She answered, yes, if I dare. Knowing what suspicion attached to her I could only put one construction on such language as that. I confess it made me uncomfortable. I had no wish to invite the girl's confidence. At the same time in the difficulties that now beset us I could hardly feel justified in refusing to listen to her if she was really bent on speaking to me. It was an awkward position and I dare say I got out of it awkwardly enough. I said to her, I don't quite understand you. Is there anything you want me to do? Mind better edge. I didn't speak unkindly. The poor girl can't help being ugly. I felt that at the time. The cue was still in my hand and I went on knocking the balls about to take off the awkwardness of the thing. As it turned out, I only made matters worse still. I'm afraid I mortified her without meaning it. She suddenly turned away. He looks at the billiard balls, I heard her say, anything rather than look at me. Before I could stop her, she had left the hall. I am not quite easy about it better edge. Would you mind telling Rosanna that I meant no unkindness? I have been a little hard on her perhaps in my own thoughts. I have almost hoped that the loss of the diamond might be traced to her. Not from any ill will to the poor girl, but— He stopped there and going back to the billiard table began to knock the balls about once more. After what had passed between the sergeant and me, I knew what it was that he had left unspoken as well as he knew it himself. Nothing but the tracing of the moonstone to our second housemaid could now raise Miss Rachel above the infamous suspicion that rested on her in the mind of Sergeant Cuff. It was no longer a question of quieting my young lady's nervous excitement. It was a question of proving her innocence. If Rosanna had done nothing to compromise herself, the hope which Mr. Franklin confessed to having felt would have been hard enough on her in all conscience, but this was not the case. She had pretended to be ill and had gone secretly to Frizing Hall. She had been up all night making something or destroying something in private, and she had been at the shivering sand that evening under circumstances which were highly suspicious to say the least of them. For all these reasons, sorry as I was for Rosanna, I could not but think that Mr. Franklin's way of looking at the matter was neither unnatural nor unreasonable in Mr. Franklin's position. I said a word to him to that effect. Yes, yes, he said in return, but there is just a chance, a very poor one, certainly, that Rosanna's conduct may admit of some explanation which we don't see at present. I hate hurting a woman's feelings better edge. Tell the poor creature what I told you to tell her, and if she wants to speak to me, I don't care whether I get into a scrape or not, send her to me in the library. With those kind words he laid down the queue and left me. Inquiry at the servants' offices informed me that Rosanna had retired to her own room. She had declined all offers of assistance with thanks, and had only asked to be left to rest in quiet. Here, therefore, was an end of any confession on her part, supposing she really had a confession to make for that night. I reported the result to Mr. Franklin, who thereupon left the library and went up to bed. I was putting the lights out and making the windows fast when Samuel came in with news of the two guests whom I had left in my room. The argument about the white moss rows had apparently come to an end at last. The gardener had gone home, and Sergeant Cuff was nowhere to be found in the lower regions of the house. I looked into my room. Quite true, nothing was to be discovered there but a couple of empty tumblers and a strong smell of hot grog. Had the Sergeant gone of his own accord to the bed-chamber that was prepared for him, I went upstairs to see. After reaching the second landing, I thought I heard a sound of quiet and regular breathing on my left-hand side. My left-hand side led to the corridor which communicated with Miss Rachel's room. I looked in, and there, coiled up on three chairs placed right across the passage there, with a red handkerchief tied round his grizzled head, and his respectable black coat rolled up for a pillow, lay and slept Sergeant Cuff. He woke instantly and quietly, like a dog, the moment I approached him. Good-night, Mr. Better-Edge, he said, and mind, if you ever take to growing roses, the white moss rose is all the better for not being budded on the dog rose, whatever the gardener may say to the contrary. What are you doing here? I asked. Why are you not in your proper bed? I am not in my proper bed, answered the Sergeant, because I am one of the many people in this miserable world who can't earn their money honestly and easily at the same time. There was a coincidence this evening between the period of Rosanna Spearman's return from the Sands and the period when Miss Verinder stated her resolution to leave the house. Whatever Rosanna may have hidden, it's clear to my mind that your young lady couldn't go away until she knew it was hidden. The two must have communicated privately once already tonight. If they try to communicate again, when the house is quiet, I want to be in their way and stop it. Don't blame me for upsetting your sleeping arrangements, Mr. Better-Edge. Blame the diamond. I wished to God the diamond had never found its way into this house I broke out. Sergeant Cuff looked with a rueful face at the three chairs on which he had condemned himself to pass the night. So do I, he said gravely. Nothing happened in the night and, I am happy to add, no attempt at communication between Miss Rachel and Rosanna rewarded the vigilance of Sergeant Cuff. I had expected the sergeant to set off for Fissing Hall the first thing in the morning. He waited about, however, as if he had something else to do first. I left him to his own devices and, going into the ground shortly after, met Mr. Franklin on his favorite walk by the shrubbery side. Before we had exchanged two words, the sergeant unexpectedly joined us. He made up to Mr. Franklin, who received him, I must own, hodlily enough. Have you anything to say to me? Was all the return he got for politely wishing Mr. Franklin good morning? I have something to say to you, sir," answered the sergeant, on the subject of the inquiry I am conducting here. You detected the turn that inquiry was really taking yesterday. Naturally enough, in your position, you are shocked and distressed. Naturally enough, also, you visit your own angry sense of your own family scandal upon me. What do you want, Mr. Franklin broken sharply enough? I want to remind you, sir, that I have at any rate thus far not been proved to be wrong. Bearing that in mind, be pleased to remember, at the same time, that I am an officer of the law acting here under the sanction of the mistress of the house. Under these circumstances, is it or is it not your duty as a good citizen to assist me with any special information you may happen to possess? I possess no special information, says Mr. Franklin. Sergeant Cuff put that answer by him as if no answer had been made. You may save my time, sir, from being wasted on an inquiry at a distance," he went on, if you choose to understand me and speak out. I don't understand you, answered Mr. Franklin, and I have nothing to say. One of the female servants, I won't mention names, spoke to you privately, sir, last night. Once more, Mr. Franklin cut him short. Once more, Mr. Franklin answered, I have nothing to say. Standing by in silence, I thought of the movement in the swing door on the previous evening and of the coattails which I had seen disappearing down the passage. Sergeant Cuff had, no doubt, just heard enough before I interrupted him to make him suspect that Rosanna had relieved her mind by confessing something to Mr. Franklin Blake. This notion had barely struck me when who should appear at the end of the shrubbery walk but Rosanna Spearman in her own proper person. She was followed by Penelope, who was evidently trying to make her retrace her steps to the house. Seeing that Mr. Franklin was not alone, Rosanna came to a standstill evidently in great perplexity what to do next. Penelope waited behind her. Mr. Franklin saw the girls as soon as I saw them. The sergeant with his devilish cunning took on not to have noticed them at all. All this happened in an instant. Before either Mr. Franklin or I could say a word, Sergeant Cuff struck in smoothly with an appearance of continuing the previous conversation. You needn't be afraid of harming the girl, sir," he said to Mr. Franklin, speaking in a loud voice so that Rosanna might hear him. On the contrary, I recommend you to honor me with your confidence if you feel any interest in Rosanna Spearman. Mr. Franklin instantly took on not to have noticed the girls either. He answered speaking loudly on his side, I take no interest whatever in Rosanna Spearman. I looked towards the end of the walk. All I saw at the distance was that Rosanna suddenly turned round the moment Mr. Franklin had spoken. Instead of resisting Penelope as she had done the moment before, she now let my daughter take her by the arm and lead her back to the house. The breakfast bell rang as the two girls disappeared, and even Sergeant Cuff was now obliged to give it up as a bad job. He said to me quietly, I shall go to Frizing Hole, Mr. Better Edge, and I shall be back before two. He went his way without a word more, and for some few hours we were well rid of him. You must make it right with Rosanna, Mr. Franklin said to me when we were alone. I seem to be fated to say or do something awkward before that unlucky girl. You must have seen yourself that Sergeant Cuff laid a trap for both of us. If he could confuse me or irritate her into breaking out, either she or I might have said something which would answer his purpose. On the spur of the moment I saw no better way out of it than the way I took. It stopped the girl from saying anything, and it showed the Sergeant that I saw through him. He was evidently listening better edge when I was speaking to you last night. He had done worse than listen as I privately thought to myself. He had remembered my telling him that the girl was in love with Mr. Franklin, and he had calculated on that when he appealed to Mr. Franklin's interest in Rosanna in Rosanna's hearing. As to listening, sir, I remarked, keeping the other point to myself, we shall all be rowing in the same boat if this sort of thing goes on much longer. Prying and peeping and listening are the natural occupations of people situated as we are. In another day or two, Mr. Franklin, we shall all be struck dumb together for this reason that we shall all be listening to surprise each other's secrets and all know it. Excuse my breaking out, sir. The hard mystery hanging over us in this house gets into my head like liquor and makes me wild. I won't forget what you have told me. I'll take the first opportunity of making it right with Rosanna Spearman. You haven't said anything to her yet about last night, have you? Mr. Franklin asked. No, sir. Then say nothing now. I had better not invite the girl's confidence with the sergeant on the lookout to surprise us together. My conduct is not very consistent better edge, is it? I see no way out of this business, which isn't dreadful to think of, unless the diamond is traced to Rosanna, and yet I can't and won't help Sergeant Cuff to find the girl out. Unreasonable enough, no doubt, but it was my state of mind as well. I thoroughly understood him. If you will, for once in your life, remember that you are mortal, perhaps you will thoroughly understand him too. The state of things, indoors and out, while Sergeant Cuff was on his way to Frizing Hall, was briefly this. Miss Rachel waited for the time when the carriage was to take her to her aunt's, still obstinately shut up in her own room. My lady and Mr. Franklin breakfasted together. After breakfast, Mr. Franklin took one of his sudden resolutions, and went out precipitately to quiet his mind by a long walk. I was the only person who saw him go, and he told me he should be back before the sergeant returned. The change in the weather foreshadowed overnight had come. Heavy rain had been followed soon after dawn by high wind. It was blowing fresh as the day got on, but though the clouds threatened more than once, the rain still held off. It was not a bad day for a walk if you were young and strong, and could breast the great gusts of wind which came sweeping in from the sea. I attended my lady after breakfast and assisted her in the settlement of her household accounts. She only once alluded to the matter of the moonstone, and that was in the way of forbidding any present mention of it between us. Wait until that man comes back, she said, meaning the sergeant. We must speak of it then. We are not obliged to speak of it now. After leaving my mistress, I found Penelope waiting for me in my room. I wished, Father, you would come and speak to Rosanna, she said. I am very uneasy about her. I suspected what was the matter readily enough, but it is a maxim of mine that men, being superior creatures, are bound to improve women if they can. When a woman wants me to do anything, my daughter or not, it doesn't matter, I always insist on knowing why. The oftener you make them rummage in their own minds for a reason, the more manageable you will find them in all the relations of life. It isn't their fault, poor wretches, that they act first and think afterwards. It is the fault of the fools who humor them. Penelope's reason why, on this occasion, may be given in her own words. I am afraid, Father, she said, Mr. Franklin has hurt Rosanna cruelly without intending it. What took Rosanna into the shrubbery walk? I asked. Her own madness, says Penelope. I can call it nothing else. She was bent on speaking to Mr. Franklin this morning come what might of it. I did my best to stop her, you saw that, if I could only have got her away before she heard those dreadful words. There, there, I said, don't lose your head. I can call to mind that anything happened to alarm Rosanna. Nothing to alarm her, Father, but Mr. Franklin said he took no interest whatever in her and, oh, he said it in such a cruel voice. He said it to stop the sergeant's mouth, I answered. I told her that, says Penelope, but you see, Father, though Mr. Franklin isn't to blame, he's been mortifying and disappointing her for weeks and weeks past, and now this comes on the top of it all. She has no right, of course, to expect him to take any interest in her. It's quite monstrous that she should forget herself and her station in that way, but she seems to have lost pride and proper feeling in everything. She frightened me, Father, when Mr. Franklin said those words. They seemed to turn her into stone. A sudden quiet came over her, and she has gone about her work ever since, like a woman in a dream. I began to feel a little uneasy. There was something in the way Penelope put it which silenced my superior sense. I called to mind, now my thoughts were directed that way, when I had passed between Mr. Franklin and Rosanna overnight. She looked cut to the heart on that occasion, and now, as ill luck would have it, she had been unavoidably stung again, poor soul, on the tender place. Sad, sad, all the more sad because the girl had no reason to justify her, and no right to feel it. I had promised Mr. Franklin to speak to Rosanna, and this seemed the fittest time for keeping my word. We found the girl sweeping the corridor outside the bedrooms, pale and composed, and neat as ever in her modest print dress. I noticed a curious dimness and dullness in her eyes, not as if she had been crying, but as if she had been looking at something too long. Possibly it was a misty something raised by her own thoughts. There was certainly no object about her to look at, which she had not seen already, hundreds and hundreds of times. Cheer up, Rosanna, I said. You mustn't fret over your fancies. I have got something to say to you from Mr. Franklin. I thereupon put the matter in the right view before her, in the friendliest and most comforting words I could find. My principles, in regard to the other sex, are, as you may have noticed, very severe. But somehow or other, when I come face to face with the women, my practice, I own, is not conformable. Mr. Franklin is very kind and considerate, pleased to thank him. That was all the answer she made me. My daughter had already noticed that Rosanna went about her work like a woman in a dream. I now added to this observation that she also listened and spoke like a woman in a dream. I doubted if her mind was in a fit condition to take in what I had said to her. Are you quite sure, Rosanna, that you understand me? I asked. Quite sure. She echoed me, not like a living woman, but like a creature moved by machinery. She went on sweeping all the time. I took away the broom as gently and as kindly as I could. Come, come, my girl, I said. This is not like yourself. You have got something on your mind. I'm your friend, and I'll stand your friend, even if you have done wrong. Make a clean breast of it, Rosanna. Make a clean breast of it. The time had been when my speaking to her in that way would have brought the tears into her eyes. I could see no change in them now. Yes, she said, I'll make a clean breast of it. To my lady, I asked. No, to Mr. Franklin. To Mr. Franklin? Yes, to Mr. Franklin. I hardly knew what to say to that. She was in no condition to understand the caution against speaking to whom in private, which Mr. Franklin had directed me to give her. Feeling my way, little by little, I only told her Mr. Franklin had gone out for a walk. It doesn't matter, she answered, I shan't trouble Mr. Franklin to-day. Why not speak to my lady, I said. The way to relieve your mind is to speak to the merciful and Christian mistress who has always been kind to you. She looked at me for a moment with a grave and steady attention as if she was fixing what I had said in her mind. Then she took the broom out of my hands and moved off with it slowly a little way down the corridor. No, she said, going on with her sweeping and speaking to herself. I know a better way of relieving my mind than that. What is it? Please to let me go on with my work. Penelope followed her and offered to help her. She answered, No, I want to do my work. Thank you, Penelope. She looked round at me. Thank you, Mr. Betteridge. There was no moving her. There was nothing more to be said. I signed to Penelope to come away with me. We left her as we had found her, sweeping the corridor like a woman in a dream. This is a matter for the doctor to look into, I said. It's beyond me. My daughter reminded me of Mr. Candy's illness, owing, as you may remember, to the chill he had caught on the night of the dinner party. His assistant, a certain Mr. Ezra Jennings, was at our disposal, to be sure, but nobody knew much about him in our parts. He had been engaged by Mr. Candy under rather peculiar circumstances, and right or wrong, we none of us liked him or trusted him. There were other doctors at Frizing Hall, but they were strangers to our house, and Penelope doubted in Rosanna's present state whether strangers might not do her more harm than good. I thought of speaking to my lady, but remembering the heavy weight of anxiety which she already had on her mind, I hesitated to add to all the other vexations this new trouble. Still, there was a necessity for doing something. The girl's state was to my thinking, downright alarming, and my mistress ought to be informed of it. Unwillingly enough, I went to her sitting-room. No one was there. My lady was shut up with Miss Rachel. It was impossible for me to see her till she came out again. I waited in vain till the clock on the front staircase struck the quarter to two. Five minutes afterwards I heard my name called from the drive outside the house. I knew the voice directly. Sergeant Cuff had returned from Frizing Hall. Going down to the front door, I met the sergeant on the steps. It went against the grain with me after what had passed between us to show him that I felt any sort of interest in his proceedings. In spite of myself, however, I felt an interest that there was no resisting. My sense of dignity sank from under me and out came the words, What news from Frizing Hall? I have seen the Indians, answered Sergeant Cuff, and I have found out what Rosanna bought privately in the town on Thursday last. The Indians will be set free on Wednesday and next week. There isn't a doubt on my mind and there isn't a doubt on Mr. Murthwaite's mind that they came to this place to steal the Moonstone. Their calculations were all thrown out, of course, by what happened in the house on Wednesday night and they have no more to do with the actual loss of the jewel than you have. But I can tell you one thing, Mr. Betteridge, if we don't find the Moonstone, they will. You have not heard the last of the three jugglers yet. Mr. Franklin came back from his walk as a sergeant said those startling words. Governing his curiosity better than I had governed mine, he passed us without a word and went on into the house. As for me, having already dropped my dignity, I determined to have the whole benefit of the sacrifice. So much for the Indians, I said. What about Rosanna next? Sergeant Cuff shook his head. The mystery in that quarter is thicker than ever, he said. I have traced her to a shop at Frizzing Hall, kept by a linen draper named Maltby. She bought nothing whatever at any of the other draper's shops or at any milliner's or tailor's shops, and she bought nothing at Maltby's but a piece of long cloth. She was very particular in choosing a certain quality as to quantity she bought enough to make a nightgown. Who's nightgown? I asked. Her own, to be sure, between twelve and three on the Thursday morning she must have slipped down to your young lady's room to settle the hiding of the Moonstone while all the rest of you were in bed. In going back to her own room, her nightgown must have brushed the wet paint on the door. She couldn't wash out the stain and she couldn't safely destroy the nightgown without first providing another like it to make the inventory of her linen complete. What proves that it was Rosanna's nightgown, I objected. The material she bought for making the substitute dress answered the sergeant. If it had been Miss Verander's nightgown, she would have had to buy lace and frilling and Lord knows what besides, and she wouldn't have had time to make it in one night. Plain long cloth means a plain servant's nightgown. No, no, Mr. Betteridge, all that is clear enough. The pinch of the question is why after having provided the substitute dress does she hide the smeared nightgown instead of destroying it. If the girl won't speak out, there is only one way of settling the difficulty. The hiding place at the shivering sand must be searched and the true state of the case will be discovered there. How are you to find the place I inquired? I'm sorry to disappoint you said the sergeant, but that's a secret which I mean to keep to myself. Not to irritate your curiosity as he irritated mine, I may here inform you that he had come back from Frizing Hall provided with a search warrant. His experience in such matters told him that Rosanna was in all probability carrying about her a memorandum of the hiding place to guide her in case she returned to it under changed circumstances and after a lapse of time. Possessed of this memorandum, the sergeant would be furnished with all that he could desire. Now, Mr. Betteridge, he went on, suppose we drop speculation and get to business. I told Joyce to have an eye on Rosanna. Where is Joyce? Joyce was the Frizing Hall policeman who had been left by Superintendent Seagrave at Sergeant Cuff's disposal. The clock struck two as he put the question and punctual to the moment the carriage came round to take Miss Rachel to her aunt's. One thing at a time said the sergeant stopping me as I was about to send in search of Joyce. I must attend to Miss Verinder first. As the rain was still threatening it was the closed carriage that had been appointed to take Miss Rachel to Frizing Hall. Sergeant Cuff Beck and Samuel to come down to him from the rumble behind. You will see a friend of mine waiting among the trees on this side of the lodge gate, he said. My friend without stopping the carriage will get up onto the rumble with you. You have nothing to do but to hold your tongue and shut your eyes otherwise you will get into trouble. With that advice he sent the footman back to his place. What Samuel thought, I don't know. It was plain to my mind that Miss Rachel was to be privately kept in view from the time when she left our house if she did leave it. A watch set on my young lady, a spy behind her in the rumble of her mother's carriage. I could have cut my own tongue out for having forgotten myself so far as to speak to Sergeant Cuff. The first person to come out of the house was my lady. She stood aside on the top step posting herself there to see what happened. Not a word did she say either to the sergeant or to me. With her lips closed and her arms folded in the light garden cloak which she had wrapped around her on coming into the air there she stood as still as a statue waiting for her daughter to appear. In a minute more Miss Rachel came downstairs very nicely dressed in some soft yellow stuff that set off her dark complexion and clipped her tight in the form of a jacket around the waist. She had a smart little straw hat on her head with a white veil twisted around it. She had primrose colored gloves that fitted her hands like a second skin. Her beautiful black hair looked as smooth as satin under her hat. Her little ears were like rosy shells. They had a pearl dangling from each of them. She came swiftly out to us as straight as a lily on its stem and as lithe and supple in every movement she made as a young cat. Nothing that I could discover was altered in her pretty face but her eyes and her lips. Her eyes were brighter and fiercer than I like to see and her lips had so completely lost their color and their smile that I hardly knew them again. She kissed her mother in a hasty and sudden manner on the cheek. She said, try to forgive me mama and then pulled down her veil over her face so vehemently that she tore it. In another moment she had run down the steps and had rushed into the carriage as if it was a hiding place. Sergeant Cuff was just as quick on his side. He put Samuel back and stood before Miss Rachel with the open carriage door in his hand at the instant when she settled herself in her place. What do you want? says Miss Rachel from behind her veil. I want to say one word to you Miss answered the sergeant before you go. I can't presume to stop your paying a visit to your aunt. I can only venture to say that you're leaving us as things are now puts an obstacle on the way of my recovering your diamond. Pleased to understand that and now decide for yourself whether you go or stay. Miss Rachel never even answered him. Drive on James she called out to the coachman. Without another word the sergeant shut the carriage door. Just as he closed it Mr. Franklin came running down the steps. Goodbye Rachel he said holding out his hand. Drive on cried Miss Rachel louder than ever and taking no more notice of Mr. Franklin than she had taken of Sergeant Cuff. Mr. Franklin stepped back thunderstruck as well he might be. The coachman not knowing what to do looked towards my lady still standing immovable on the top step. My lady with anger and sorrow and shame all struggling together in her face made him a sign to start the horses and then turned back hastily into the house. Mr. Franklin recovering the use of his speech called after her as the carriage drove off. Aunt you were quite right except my thanks for all your kindness and let me go. My lady turned as though to speak to him then as if distrusting herself waved her hand kindly. Let me see you before you leave us Franklin she said in a broken voice and went on to her own room. Do me a last favor betteridge says Mr. Franklin turning to me with the tears in his eyes. Get me away to the train as soon as you can. He too went his way into the house for the moment Miss Rachel had completely unmanned him. Judge from that how fond he must have been of her. Sergeant Cuff and I were left face to face at the bottom of the steps. The sergeant stood with his face set towards a gap in the trees commanding a view of one of the windings of the drive which led from the house. He had his hands in his pockets and he was softly whistling the last rows of summer to himself. There's a time for everything I said savagely enough this isn't a time for whistling. At that moment the carriage appeared in the distance through the gap on its way to the lodge gate. There was another man besides Samuel plainly visible in the rumble behind. All right said the sergeant to himself. He turned round to me. It's no time for whistling Mr. Betteridge as you say. It's time to take this business in hand now without sparing anybody. We'll begin with Rosanna Spearman. Where is Joyce? We both called for Joyce and received no answer. I sent one of the stable boys to look for him. You heard what I said to Miss Verinder remarked the sergeant while we were waiting and you saw how she received it. I tell her plainly that her leaving us will be an obstacle in the way of my recovering her diamond and she leaves in the face of that statement. Your young lady has got a traveling companion in her mother's carriage Mr. Betteridge and the name of it is the Moonstone. I said nothing. I only held on like death to my belief in Miss Rachel. The stable boy came back followed very unwillingly as it appeared to me by Joyce. Where is Rosanna Spearman? asked Sergeant Cuff. I can't account for it sir. Joyce began and I am very sorry but somehow or other. Before I went to Frizing Hall said the sergeant cutting him short. I told you to keep your eyes on Rosanna Spearman without allowing her to discover that she was being watched. Do you mean to tell me that you have let her give you the slip? I'm afraid sir says Joyce beginning to tremble that I was perhaps a little too careful not to let her discover me. There are such a many passages in the lower parts of this house. How long is it since you missed her? Not on an hour since sir. You can go back to your regular business at Frizing Hall said the sergeant speaking just as composedly as ever in his usual quiet and dreary way. I don't think your talents are at all in our line Mr. Joyce. Your present form of employment is a trifle beyond you. Good morning. The man slunk off. I find it very difficult to describe how I was affected by the discovery that Rosanna Spearman was missing. I seemed to be in 50 different minds about it all at the same time. In that state I stood staring at Sergeant Cuff and my powers of language quite failed me. No Mr. Betteridge said the sergeant as if he had discovered the uppermost thought in me and was picking it out to be answered before all the rest. Your young friend Rosanna won't slip through my fingers so easy as you think. As long as I know where Miss Verunder is I have the means at my disposal of tracing Miss Verunder's accomplice. I prevented them from communicating last night. Very good. They will get together at Frising Hall instead of getting together here. The present inquiry must be simply shifted rather sooner that I had anticipated from this house to the house at which Miss Verunder is visiting. In the meantime I'm afraid I must trouble you to call the servants together again. I went round with him to the servants hall. It is very disgraceful but it is not the less true that I had another attack of the detective fever when he said those last words. I forgot that I hated Sergeant Cuff. I seized him confidentially by the arm. I said, for goodness sake tell us what you're going to do with the servants now. The great Cuff stood stock still and addressed himself in a kind of melancholy rapture to the empty air. If this man, said the Sergeant, apparently meaning me, only understood the growing of roses he would be the most completely perfect character on the face of creation. After that strong expression of feeling he sighed and put his arm through mine. This is how it stands he said dropping down again to business. Rosanna has done one of two things. She's either gone direct to freezing hall before I can get there or she has gone first to visit her hiding place at the shivering sand. The first thing is to find out is which of the servants saw the last of her before she left the house. On instituting this inquiry it turned out that the last person who had set eyes on Rosanna was Nancy, the kitchen maid. Nancy had seen her slip out with a letter in her hand and stopped the butcher's man who had just been delivering some meat at the back door. Nancy had heard her ask the man to post the letter when he got back to freezing hall. The man had looked at the address and had said it was a roundabout way of delivering a letter directed to Cobb's hole to post it at freezing hall and that moreover on a Saturday which would prevent the letter from getting to its destination until Monday morning. Rosanna had answered that the delivery of the letter being delayed till Monday was of no importance. The only thing she wished to be sure of was that the man would do what she told him. The man had promised to do it and had driven away. Nancy had been called back to her work in the kitchen and no other person had seen anything afterwards of Rosanna Spearman. Well, I asked when we were alone again. Well, says the sergeant, I must go to freezing hall. About the letter, sir. Yes, the memorandum of the hiding place is in that letter. I must see the address at the post office. If it is the address I suspect I shall pay our friend Mrs. Yaland another visit on Monday next. I went with the sergeant to order the pony chase. In the stable yard, we got a new light thrown on the missing girl. End of Chapter 18 The Moonstone Part 19 This is the LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins Read by Leanne Howlett Chapter 19 The news of Rosanna's disappearance had, as it appeared, spread among the Outdoor servants. They too had made their inquiries, and they had just laid hands on a quick little imp, nicknamed Duffy, who was occasionally employed in weeding the garden and who had seen Rosanna Spearman as lately as half an hour since. Duffy was certain that the girl had passed him in the fur plantation, not walking but running in the direction of the seashore. Does this boy know the coast hereabouts? Asked Sergeant Cuff. He has been born and bred on the coast, I answered. Duffy, says a sergeant, do you want to earn a shilling? If you do, come along with me. Keep the pony chase ready, Mr. Betteridge, till I come back. He started for the shivering sand at a rate that my legs, though well enough preserved for my time of life, had no hope of matching. Little Duffy, as the way is with the young savages in our parts, when they are in high spirits, gave a howl and trotted off at the sergeant's heels. Here again, I find it impossible to give anything like a clear account of the state of my mind in the interval after Sergeant Cuff had left us. A curious and stupefying restlessness got possession of me. I did a dozen different needless things in and out of the house, not one of which I can now remember. I don't even know how long it was after the sergeant had gone to the sands when Duffy came running back with a message for me. Sergeant Cuff had given the boy a leaf torn out of his pocketbook on which was written in pencil. Send me one of Rosanna Spearman's boots and be quick about it. I dispatched the first woman servant I could find to Rosanna's room and I sent the boy back to say that I myself would follow him with the boot. This I am well aware was not the quickest way to take of obeying the directions which I had received, but I was resolved to see for myself what new mystification was going on before I trusted Rosanna's boot in the sergeant's hands. My old notion of screening the girl, if I could, seemed to have come back on me again at the eleventh hour. This state of feeling to say nothing of the detective fever hurried me off as soon as I got the boot at the nearest approach to a run which a man turned seventy can reasonably hope to make. As I got near the shore the clouds gathered black and the rain came down drifting in great white sheets of water before the wind. I heard the thunder of the sea on the sandbank at the mouth of the bay. A little further on I passed the boy crouching for shelter under the lee of the sandhills. Then I saw the raging sea and the rollers tumbling in on the sandbank and the driven rain sweeping over the waters like a flying garment and the yellow wilderness of the beach with one solitary black figure standing on it, the figure of sergeant cuff. He waved his hand towards the north when he first saw me. Keep on that side, he shouted, and come on down here to me. I went down to him choking for breath with my heart leaping as if it was like to leap out of me. I was past speaking. I had a hundred questions to put to him and not one of them would pass my lips. His face frightened me. I saw a look in his eyes which was a look of horror. He snatched the boot out of my hand and set it in a footmark on the sand bearing south from us as we stood and pointing straight towards the rocky ledge called the south spit. The mark was not yet blurt out by the rain and the girl's boot fitted it to a hair. The sergeant pointed to the boot in the footmark without saying a word. I caught at his arm and tried to speak to him and failed as I had failed when I tried before. He went on following the footsteps down and down to where the rocks and the sand joined. The south spit was just a wash with a flowing tide. The waters heaved over the hidden face of the shivering sand. Now this way and now that with an obstinate patience that was dreadful to see sergeant cuff tried the boot in the footsteps and always found it pointing the same way straight to the rocks. Hunt as he might no sign could he find anywhere of the footsteps walking from them. He gave it up at last still keeping silence. He looked again at me and then he looked out at the waters before us heaving in deeper and deeper over the quicksand. I looked where he looked and I saw his thought in his face. A dreadful dumb trembling crawled all over me on a sudden. I fell upon my knees on the beach. She has been back at the hiding place I heard the sergeant say to himself some fatal accident has happened to her on those rocks. The girls altered looks and words and actions. The numbed deadened way in which she listened to me and spoke to me when I had found her sweeping the corridor but a few hours since she had opened my mind and warned me even as the sergeant spoke that his guess was wide of the dreadful truth. I tried to tell him of the fear that had frozen me up. I tried to say the death she has died sergeant was a death of her own seeking. No, the words wouldn't come. The dumb trembling held me in its grip. I couldn't feel the driving rain. I couldn't see the rising tide. As in the vision of a dream the poor lost creature came back before me. I saw her again as I had seen her in the past time on the morning when I went to fetch her into the house. I heard her again telling me that the shivering sand seemed to draw her to it against her will and wondering whether her grave was waiting for her there. The horror of it struck at me and some unfathomable way through my own child. My girl was just her age. My girl, tried as Rosanna was tried, might have lived that miserable life and died this dreadful death. The sergeant kindly lifted me up and turned me away from the side of the place where she had perished. With that relief I began to fetch my breath again and to see things about me as things really were. Looking towards the sand hills I saw the men servants from out of doors and the fisherman named Jolland all running down to us together and all having taken the alarm calling out to know if the girl had been found. In the fewest words the sergeant showed them the evidence of the foot marks and told them that a fatal accident must have happened to her. He then picked out the fisherman from the rest and put a question to him turning about again towards the sea. Tell me he said could a boat have taken her off in such weather as this from those rocks where her foot marks stop? The fisherman pointed to the rollers tumbling in on the sand bank and to the great waves leaping up in clouds of foam against the headlands on either side of us. No boat that ever was built he answered could have got to her through that. Sergeant Cuff looked for the last time at the foot marks on the sand which the rain was now fast blurring out. There he said is the evidence that she can't have left this place by land and here he went on looking at the fisherman is the evidence that she can't have got away by sea. He stopped and considered for a minute. She was seen running towards this place half an hour before I got here from the house he said to Yoland some time has passed since then. Call it all together an hour ago. How high would the water be at that time on this side of the rocks? He pointed to the south side otherwise the side which was not filled up by the quick sand. As the tide makes today said the fisherman there wouldn't have been water enough to drown a kitten on that side of the spit an hour since. Sergeant Cuff turned about northward towards the quick sand. How much on this side he asked. Less still answered Yoland. The shivering sand would have been just to wash and no more. The sergeant turned to me and said that the accident must have happened on the side of the quick sand. My tongue was loosened at that. No accident I told him when she came to this place she came weary of her life to ended here. He started back from me. How do you know? He asked. The rest of them crowded round. The sergeant recovered himself instantly. He put them back from me. He said I was an old man. He said the discovery had shaken me. He said let him alone a little. Then he turned to Yoland and asked is there any chance of finding her when the tide ebbs again? And Yoland answered none. What the sand gets the sand keeps forever. Having said that the fisherman came a step nearer and addressed himself to me. Mr. Betteridge he said I have a word to say to you about the young woman's death. Four foot out broad wise along the side of the spit there's a shelf of rock about half fathomed down under the sand. My question is why didn't she strike that? If she slipped by accident from off the spit she fell in where there's foothold at the bottom at a depth that would barely cover her to the waist. She must have waited out or jumped out into the deeps beyond or she wouldn't be missing now. No accident sir. The deeps of the quicksand have got her and they have got her by her own act. After that testimony from a man whose knowledge was to be relied on the sergeant was silent. The rest of us like him held our peace. With one accord we all turned back up the slope of the beach. At the sand hillocks we were met by the undergroom running to us from the house. The lad is a good lad and has an honest respect for me. He handed me a little note with a decent sorrow in his face. Penelope sent me with this Mr. Betteridge he said she found it in Rosanna's room. It was her last farewell word to the old man who had done his best. Thank God always done his best to befriend her. You've often forgiven me Mr. Betteridge in past times. When you next see the shivering sand try to forgive me once more. I found my grave where my grave was waiting for me. I have lived and died sir. Grateful for your kindness. There was no more than that. Little as it was I hadn't manhood enough to hold up against it. Your tears come easy when you're young and beginning the world. Your tears come easy when you're old and leaving it. I burst out crying. Sergeant Cuff took a step nearer to me meaning kindly I don't doubt. I shrank back from him. Don't touch me I said it's the dread of you that has driven her to it. You were wrong Mr. Betteridge he answered quietly but there will be time enough to speak of it when we are indoors again. I followed the rest of them with the help of the groom's arm. Through the driving rain we went back to meet the trouble and the terror that were waiting for us at the house. End of Chapter 19 This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public to main. For more information or to volunteer please visit LibriVox.org The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins Chapter 20 Those in front had spread the news before us. We found the servants in a state of panic. As we passed my lady's door it was thrown open violently from the inner side. My mistress came out among us with Mr. Franklin following and trying vainly to compose her. Quite beside herself with the horror of the thing. You are answerable for this she cried out threatening the sergeant wildly with her hand. Gabriel give that wretch his money and release me from the sight of him. The sergeant was the only one among us who was fit to cope with her. Being the only one among us who was in possession of himself. I am no more answerable for this distressing calamity my lady than you are. He said. If in half an hour from this you still insist on my leaving the house I will accept your ladyship's dismissal but not your ladyship's money. It was spoken very respectfully but very firmly at the same time and it had its effect on my mistress as well as on me. She suffered Mr Franklin to lead her back into the room. As the door closed on the two the sergeant looking about among the women servants in his observant way noticed that while all the rest were merely frightened Penelope was in tears. When your father has changed his wet clothes he said to her come and speak to us in your father's room. Before the half hour was out I had got my dry clothes on and had lent Sergeant Cuff such change of dress as he required. Penelope came into us to hear what the sergeant wanted with her. I don't think I ever felt what a good dutiful daughter I had so strongly as I felt it in that moment. I took her and sat her on my knee and I prayed God to bless her. She hid her head on my bosom and put her arms around my neck and we waited a little while in silence. The poor dead girl must have been at the bottom of it I think with my daughter and with me. The sergeant went to the window and stood there looking out. I thought it right to thank him for considering us both in this way and I did. People in high life have all the luxuries to themselves among others the luxury of indulging their feelings. People in low life have no such privilege. Necessity which spares our betters has no pity on us. We learn to put our feelings back into ourselves and to jog on with our duties as patiently as may be. I don't complain of this I only notice it. Penelope and I were ready for the sergeant as soon as the sergeant was ready on his side. Asked if she knew what had led her fellow servant to destroy herself my daughter answered as you will foresee that it was for love of Mr Franklin Blake. Asked next if she had mentioned this notion of hers to any other person Penelope answered I have not mentioned it for Rezanah's sake. I felt it necessary to add a word to this. I said and for Mr Franklin's sake my dear as well if Rezanah has died for the love of him it is not with his knowledge or by his fault. Let him leave the house today if he does leave it without the useless pain of knowing the truth. Sergeant Cuff said quite right and fell silent again comparing Penelope's notion as it seemed to me with some other notion of his own which he kept to himself. At the end of the half hour my mistress's bell rang. On my way to answer it I messed Mr Franklin coming out of his aunt's sitting-room. He mentioned that her ladyship was ready to see Sergeant Cuff in my presence as before and he added that he himself wanted to say two words to the sergeant first. On our way back to my room he stopped and looked at the railway timetable in the hall. Are you really going to leave us sir? I asked. Miss Rachel will surely come right again if you only give her time. She will come right again answered Mr Franklin when she hears that I have gone away and that she will see me no more. I thought he spoke in resentment of my young ladys treatment of him but it was not so. My mistress has noticed from the time when the police first came into the house that the bear mention of him was enough to set Miss Rachel's temper in a flame. He had been too fond of his cousin to like to confess this to himself until the truth had been forced on him when she drove off to her aunt's. His eyes once opened in that cruel way of which you know Mr Franklin had taken his resolution the one resolution which a man of any spirit could take to leave the house. What he had to say to the sergeant was spoken in my presence. He described her ladyship as willing to acknowledge that she had spoken over hastily and he asked if sergeant cuff would consent in that case to accept his fee and to leave the matter of the diamond where the matter stood now. The sergeant answered. No sir, my fee is paid me for doing my duty. I decline to take it until my duty is done. I don't understand you says Mr Franklin. I'll explain myself sir says the sergeant. When I came here I undertook to throw the necessary light on the matter of the missing diamond. I am now ready and waiting to redeem my pledge. When I have stated the case to Lady Verinda as the case now stands and when I have told her plainly what course of action to take for the recovery of the moonstone the responsibility will be off my shoulders. Let her ladyship decide after that whether she does or does not allow me to go on. I shall then have done what I undertook to do and I'll take my fee. In those words Sergeant Cuff reminded us that even in the detective police a man may have a reputation to lose. The view that he took was so plainly the right one that there was no more to be said. As I rose to conduct him to my ladys room he asked if Mr Franklin wished to be present. Mr Franklin answered not unless Lady Verinda desires it. He added in a whisper to me as I was following the sergeant out. I know what that man is going to say about Rachel and I'm too fond of her to hear it and keep my temper. Leave me by myself. I left him miserable enough leaning on the sill of my window with his face hidden in his hands and Penelope peeping through the door longing to comfort him. In Mr Franklin's place I should have called her in. When you are ill used by one woman there is great comfort in telling it to another because nine times out of ten the other always takes your side. Perhaps when my back was turned he did call her in. In that case it's only doing my daughter justice to declare that she would stick at nothing in the way of comforting Mr Franklin Blake. In the meantime Sergeant Cuff and I proceeded to my ladys room. At the last conference we had held with her we had found her not over-willing to lift her eyes from the book that she had on the table. On this occasion there was a change for the better. She met the sergeant's eye with an eye that was as steady as his own. The family spirit showed itself in every line of her face and I knew that Sergeant Cuff would meet his match when a woman like my mistress was strung up to hear the worst that he could say to her.