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TSie Darn el’s Jewels
Is the title of ;i
Thrilling Serial Story
CHAPTER XIII.
[t was Aurel ia!
The engine and trucks stopped, the
men shouldered their tools and tumbled
out and we followed them. A few hun
dred paces in front of us was a railway
me nearest way to tiie liouse. A little
knot of calves intrenched on a mound of
straw in the center of the yard lowered
their heads and looked askance at us as
we came in, and a party of ducks re
treated hastily from our path with a
chorus of exclamations, while a thin
colly dog burst out of a barrel at the
back door and made a series of gym
nastics at the end of a chain, barking
hoarsely, as if he had not spared himself
of late.
An elderly woman with red arms met
us at the door, and on a whisper from
the police inspector first shook her head,
and then, in answer to a further whis
per, nodded at another door, and a voice
calling her from within hastily disap
peared.
The inspector opened the door she had
indicated and went in, I with him.
Charles, who had grown very grave,
hung back with Ralph, who seemed too
much dazed to notice anything in heaven
above or the earth beneath. T*ie door
opened into an outhouse, roughly paved
with round stones, where ban-els, staves
and divers lumber had been put away.
There was straw in the further end
of it, out of which a yellow cat raised
two gleaming eyes, and then flew up a
ladder against the wall and disappeared
among the rafters. In the middle of the
floor, lying a little apart, were three fig
ures with sheets over them. Instinctive
ly we felt that we were in the presence
of death. I looked back at Charles and
bridge, over which a road passed, and j Ralph, who were still standing outside
under which the rail went at a sharp i in the falling snow. Charles was bare-
curve. The snow had drifted heavily
against the bridge with its high earth
embankment, making manifest at a
glance the cause of the disaster.
The bridge was crowded with human
figures, and on the line below men were j
working in the drift amid piles of debris :
and splintered wood. The wrecked train j
had all been slightly draped in snow; the j
engine alone, barely cold, lying black i
and grim, like some mighty giant, for- i
midable in death. A sheet of glass ice |
near it showed how the boiler had burst.
Some of the hindermost carriages were
still standing or had fallen comparative
ly uninjured; but others seemed to have
leaped upon their fellows and plowed
right through them into the drift. It
was well that it began to snow as we
reached the spot. There were traces of
dismal smears on the white ground
which it would be seemly to hide.
Our friend in black went forward and
asked a few questions of the man in
charge and presently returned.
“The remainder of the passengers are
at the farm,” he said, pointing to a house
at a little distance, and without further
delay we began to scramble up the steep
embankment and clamber over the stone
wall of the bridge into the road. My
mind was full of other things, but I re
member still the number of people as
sembled on the bridge, and how a man
was standing up in his donkey cart to
view the scene.
It was Saturday, and there were quan
tities of village school boys sitting
astride on the low wall, or perched on
adjacent hurdles, evidently enjoying the
spectacle, jostling, bawling, eating
oranges and throwing the peel at the
engine. Some older people touched
their hats sympathetically, and one went
and opened a gate for us into a field,
through which many feet seemed to have
come and gone, but for the greater
number the event was evidently re
garded as an interesting variation in the
dull routino of everyday life, and to the
school boys it was an undoubted treat.
Ralph and Charles walked on in front,
following the track across the field. It
was not particularly heavy walking
after what we had had earlier in the
day, but Ralph stumbled perpetually,
and presently Charles drew his arm
through lps own and the two went on
together, the police inspector following
with me.
In a few minutes we reached the farm
and entered the. famya^d, yyhich .was
TTTANTED-
VV character to deliver and collect it
Georgia for old established manufacturing
wholesale house, $°00 a year, sure pay. Hon
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headed, but Ralph was looking absently
in front of him, seeming conscious of
nothing. The inspector made me a sign.
He had raised one of the sheets, and now
withdrew it altogether. My heart seem
ed to stand still.
It was Aurelia! Aurelia changed in
the last great change of all, hut still
Aurelia. The fixed artificial color in the
cheek consorted ill with the bloodless
pallor of the rest of the face, which was
set in a look of surprise and terror. She
was altered beyond what should have
been. She looked several years older,
but it was still Aurelia. Those little
gloved hands, tightly clinched, were the
same which she had held to the library
fire as we talked the day before; even
the dres3 was the same. Alas! she had
been in too great a hurry to change it
before she left, or her thin shoes. Poor
little Aurelia!
And then—I don't know how it was,
but in another moment Ralph was
kneeling by her, bending over her,
taking the stiffened bauds in his trem
bling clasp, imploring the deaf .ears to
hear him, calling wildly to the pale lips
to speak to him which had done with
hjunan speech. 1 could not bear it, and
1 turned away and looked out through
the open door at the snow falling. The
inspector came and stood beside me. In
the silence which followed we could
hear Charles speaking gently from time
to time, and when at last we both turned
toward them again Ralph had flung
himself down on an old bench at the
further end of the outhouse, with his
back turned toward us, his arms resting
on a barrel and his head bowed down
upon them. He neither spoke nor moved.
Charles left him and came toward us,
and he and the inspector spoke apart for
a moment, and then the latter dropped
on his knees beside the dead woman and,
after looking carefully at a dark stain
on one of the wrists, turned back the
sleeve. Crushed deep into the round,
white arm gleamed something bright.
It was an emerald bracelet which we
both knew. Charles cast a hasty glance
at Ralph, but he had not moved, and he
drew me beside him so as to interpose
our two figures between him and the in
spector. The latter quietly turned down
the sleeve and recomposed the arm.
“I knew she would have them on her,
if she had them at all,” he said In a low
voice. “We need look no further at
present. Not one will be missing. They
are all there.” ,
He gazed long and earnestly at the
dead face, and then to my horror he sud
denly unfastened the little hat. I made
an involuntary movement as if to stop
him, but Charles laid an iron grip upon
me and motioned to me to be still. The
stealthy hand quietly pushed back the
iair curi3 upon the forehead, and in an
other moment they fell still further back,
showing a few short locks of dark hair
beneath them, which so completely al
tered the dead face that I could hardly
recognize it as belonging to the same
person. The inspector raised his head
and looked significantly at Charles.
Then he quietly drew forward the
yellow hair over the forehead again, re
placed the hat and rose to his feet.
Charles and I glanced apprehensively at
Ralph, hut he had not stirred. As we
looked a hurried step came across the
ard, a hand raised the latch of the door
and some one entered abruptly. It was
Carr. For one moment he stood in the
doorway; for one moment his eyes rested
horror struck on the dead woman, then
darted at us, from us to the inspector,
who was coolly watching him, and—he
was gone! gone as suddenly as he had
come, gone swiftly out again into the
falling snow, followed by the wild bark
ing of the dog.
Charles, who had had his back to the
door, turned in time to see him, and he
made a rush for the door, but the in
spector flung himself in his way and held
him forcibly.
“Let me go! Let me get at him!”
panted Charles, struggling furiously.
“I shall do no such thing, sir. It can
do no good and might do harm. He is
armed, and you are not, and he would
not be overscrupulous if he were pushed.
Besides, what can you accuse him of?
Intent to rob? For lie did not do it. If
you have lost anytliing remember you
have found it again. If you caught him
a hundred times you have no hold on
him. I know him of old.”
“You?”
“Yes; I have known him by sight
long enough. He is not a new hand by
any means—nor she either, as to that,
poor thing!”
“But what on earth brought him
here?”
“He was waiting for news of her in
London most likely, and he knew she
would have the jewels on her and came
down when he got wind of the accident.”
“Knew she would have the jewels!
Then do you mean to say there was col
lusion between the two?”
The inspector glanced furtively at
Ralph, hut he had never stirred or
raised his head since ho had laid it down
in iiis clinched hands.
“They are both well known to the
police,” he said at last, “and I think it
probable there was collusion between
them, considering they were man and
wife.”
l am told that I ought to write some
thing in the way of a conclusion to this
account of the Danvers jewels, as if the
end of the last chapter were not con
clusion enough. Charles, who has just
read it, says especially that his character
requires what he calls “an elegant finish,”
and suggests that a slight indication of
young and lovely heiress in eonnec-
woulcl call them, Mr. and Mrs.'Urown,
alias Sinclair, alias Tibbits. I for one
don't believea word of it, and I don't see
window and stroked the cat, which was
taking the air on the sill. He said that
he felt the heat, and lie certainly looked
how he could have found it all out, as very much knocked up. I do not feel
he said he had, through the police and
people of that kind. 1 don’t consider it
tion with himself would give pleasure
to the thoughtful reader. But I do not
mean at the last moment to depart from
the exact truth and dabble in fiction
just to make a suitable conclusion.
If I must write something more I
must beg that it will be kept in mind
that if further details concerning the
robbery are now added against my own
judgment they will rest on Charles’ au
thority, not mine, as anything I after
ward heard was only through Charles,
whose information I never consider reli
able in tlio least degree.
It was not till th-ee months later that
I saw him again, on a wot April after
noon. I was still living in London with
Jane when he came to see me, having
just returned from a long tour abroad
with Ralph,
Sir George, he said, was quite well
again, but the coolness between himself
and his father had dropped almost to
freezing point since it had come to light
•that ho had been innocent after nil. His
father could not forgive his son for put
ting him in the wrong.
“I seldom disappoint him in matters
of this kind,” he said. “Indeed, I may
say I have, as a rule, surpassed his ex
pectations, and I must he careful never
to fall short of them in this way again.
But ah! Miss Middleton, I am sure you
will agree with me how difficult it is to
yireserve an even course without relax
ing a little at times.”
“My dear Mr. Charles,” said Jane,
beaming at him over her knitting, but
not quite taking him in the manner he
intended, “you are young yet; but don’t
be down hearted. I am sure by your
face that as you grow older these devia
tions which you so properly regret will
grow fewer and fewer until as life goes
on they will gradually cease altogether.”
“I consider it not improbable myself,”
said Charles, with a faint smile, and he
changed the conversation. I really can
not put down here all that he proceeded
to say in the most cold blooded manner
concerning Carr and Aurelia, or, as he
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is at all respectable consorting with the
police i:i that way; buF’then Charles
never was respectable, as I told Jane af
ter he left, arousing excited feelings on
her part which made me regret having
mentioned it.
According to him. Carr, who had never
been seen or heard of since the day after
the accident, was a professional thief
who had probably gone to in India
with the express design of obtaining pos
ses-ion of Sir John's jewels, which had
till near the time of his death, been safe
ly stowed away in a bank in Calcutta.
He and his wife usually worked together
but on this occasion sh9 had, by means
of her engaging manners and youthful
appearance, struck up an acquaintance
abroad with Lady Mary Cunningham
who, it will be remembered, had jewels
of considerable value, ivitli a view to
those jewels.
Ralph she had used as her tool, am:
engaged herself to him in the expecta
tion that on her return to England she
might, by means of her intimacy with
the family, have an opportunity of tak
ing them. Lady Mary having left them
Tvhile abroad, ivitli her banker in Lon
don. The opportunity came while she
was at Stoke Moreton. but in the mean
while Sir John’s priceless legacy had
arrived, hating eluded her husband’s
vigilance. (That certainly was true.
The jewels were safe enough as long as
I had anything to do with them.) Her
husband, who followed them, saw that
he was suspected and threw the game
into her hands, devoting himself entire
lv to putting his own innocence beyond
f. doubt, in which, with Ralph’s assist
ance, he succeeded.
“I see now,” continued Charles, “why
she spilt her tea when Carr arrived. She
was taken by surprise on seeing him
enter the room, having had probably no
idea that he was the friend whom yon
had telegraphed for. I suspect, too,
that same evening after the hall, when
she and Carr went together to find the
bag, it was to have a last word to en
able them to play into each other's
hands, being aware, if I remember
rightly, that father had gone to bed in
company with the key of the safe, and
that consequently the jewels might be
left within easier reach than usual.
No doubt she weighed the matter in her
own mind, and decided to give up
all thought of Lady Mary’s jewels, and
to secure those which were ten times
their value. She could not have taken
both without drawing suspicion upon
herself. Like a wise woman she left the
smaller, and went in for the larger prize
a less clever one would have tried for
both and have failed. She failed, it is
true, by an oversight. She could never
have noticed that the piece of paper
wrapped round the crescent was peculiar
in any way, or she would not have left
it on the table among the others. She
turned it off well when Evelyn recog
nized it, and made the most of her time.
She was within an ace of success, hut
fate was against her. And Carr lost no
time either, for that matter, for I have
since found out that the telegram she
sent was to Birmingham, where he was
no doubt hiding, bidding him meet
her in London earlier than had been
arranged. Of course he set off for the
scene of the accident directly he heard
of it, having received no further com
munication from her. We only arrived
ten minutes before him. For my part I
admired her more than I ever did be
fore when the truth about her came oht,
1 considered her to he a pink-and-white
nonenity, without an idea beyond a neat
adjustment of pearl powder, and then
found that she possessed brains enough
lo outwit tv o minds of no mean caliber,
namely, yours, Middleton, and my own.
Evelyn was the only person who had the
slightest suspicion of her, and that hard
ly amounted to more than an instinct,
for she owned that she had no reason to
show for it.”
“I wonder Lady Mari' was so com
pletely taken in by her to start with,” I
said.
“I don’t,” replied Charles. “I have
even heard of elderly men being taken
in by young ones. Besides, suspicious
people are always liable to distrust their
own nearest relatives, especially their
prepossessing nephews, and then lay
themselves open to be taken in by entire
strangers. She wanted to get Ralph
married, and she took a fancy to this
girl, who was laying herself out to be
taken a fancy to. In short she trusted
to her own judgment, and it failed
her, as usual. I wrote very kindly
to her from abroad, telling her how sin
cerely I sympathized with her in her
distress at finding how entirely her
judgment had been at fault; how la
mentably she had been deceived from
first to last, and how much trouble she
had been the innocent means of bring
ing on the family. I have had no reply.
Dear Aunt Mary! That reminds me
that she is in London now, and I think a
call from mo and a personal-expression
of sympathy might give her pleasure.”
Aid he rose to take his leave.
I had let Charles go without contr adict
ing a word he had said, because, unfort
unately, I was not in a position to do so.
As I have said before, I am not given to
suspecting a friend, even though appear
ances may be against him, and I still be
lieved in Carr’s innocence, though I must
own that I was sorry that he never an
swered any of the numerous letters I
wrote to him, or ever came to see me in
London, as I had particularly asked him
to do. Of course I did not believe that
he was married to Aurelia, for it was
only on the word of a stranger and a po
lice inspector, while I knew from his own
lips that he was engaged to a countrywo
man of his own. However, be that how it
may, my own rooted comiction at the
time, which has remained unshaken ever
since, is that in some way he became
aware that Ip was unjustly suspected,
and being, fixe all Americans, of asensi
tive nature, he retired to liis native land.
Anyhow, I have never seen or beard any
thing of him since. I am aware that Jane
holds a different opinion, but then
Charles liad prejudiced her against him,
so much so that it has ended by becom-
a subject on which we do not con
verse together.
I saw Charles again a few months
later, on a sultry night in July. I was
leaving town the next day to be present
at Ralph’s wedding, and Jane and I were
talking it over toward 10 o’clock—the
first cool time in the day—when he
walked in. He looked pale and jaded as
he sat down wearily by. us at the onen
heat myself, T am glad to say.
“I am going abroad to-morrow,” he
said, after a few remarks on other sub
jects. “It is not merely a question of
pleasure, though I shall be glad to be out
of London, but I have of late become an
object of such increasing interest to
those who possess my .autograph that I
have decided on taking change of air for
a time."
“Do you mean to sar you are not go
ing down to .Stoke Moreton for Ralph’s
wedding?” I exclaimed. “I thought we
should have traveled together, as we
once did six months ago.”
“I can’t go," said Charles, almost
sharply. “I have told Ralph so.”
“I am sure he will be very much dis
appointed, and Evelyn, too, and the
wedding being from her uncle’s bouse,
as she ha3 no home of her own, will
make your absence all the more
marked.”
“It must he marked then, but the
young people will survive it, and Aunt
Mary will he thankful. She has not
spoken to me since I made that little call
upon her in the spring. When I pass
her carriage in the Row she looks the
other way.”
“I am glad Ralph has consoled him
self,” I said. “A good and charming
woman like Evelyn and a nice steady
fellow like Ralph are bound to be happy
together.”
“Y T es,” said Charles, “I suppose they
are. She deserves to be happy. She al
ways liked Ralph, and he is a good fel
low. The model young men make all
the running nowadays. In novels the
good woman always marries the scape
grace, hut it doesnot seem to be the case
in real fife.”
“Anyhow, not in this instance,” I re
marked cheerfully.
“No, not in this instance, as yon so
justly observe,” he replied, with a pass
ing gleam of amusement in liis restless,
tired eyes. “And now,” producing a
small packet, “as Iran not going myself
1 want to give mv- wedding present to
the bride into your charge. Perliaps you
will take it down to-morrow and give it
into her own hands with my best
wishes.”
“Might we see it first?” said Jane, with
all a woman's curiosity, evidently scent
ing a jewel case from afar.
Charles unwrapped a small morocco
case and, touching a spring, showed the
diamond crescent, beautifully reset and
polished, blazing on its red satin couch.
“Ralph said I should have it, and he
sent it me some time since,” he ’said,
tinning it in his hand; “but it seems a
pity to flitter it away in paying bills,
and,” in a lower tone, “I should like to
giv8 it to Evelyn. I hear she has re
fused to wear any of Sir John’s jewels
on her wedding day, but perhaps if you
were to ask her—she and I are old friends
—she might make an exception in favor
of the crescent.”
And she did.
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We presume you bought them from us, for th
a house nor a hamlet within a hundred and more miles of
Augusta, the occupant of which has not at some time traded
with us. The people by their patronage have helped us to
increase our business from small beginnings, until to-dav
we occupy the largest and best stocked warerooms in the
whole South, and on our part, we have given our utmost en
deavors to please and satisfy ever}-body with the best value
for their money.
We have been urged of late years, time asd time again.
To add furniture and house-furnishings by
of friends, to the end that they might
reasonable prices. Of all our triumph Furniture 1
the greatest, until to-day we have the largest n
occupied with the most desirable goods at the
prices ever offered to the public in the Soul
China Closets, Look
Cases, Wardrobes, Com
bination Cases. Lounges,
Bedroom Suites, Parlor
OU!
thousand!
procure tin:
t;oor
most rev.
nd.
Suites, Dining
Suites, Enameled
Brass Beds, Table
p
<ocm i
Chairs of ail kinds.
Sideboards in
Golden Oak,
Walnut and
Mahogany.
Sideboards,
Racks, Cocoa, v
Jute, China end
ncse Mattings. S!
Stair and Hall C
and in Rugs a...
Squares.
j i
CA.STORXA.
Bears the /} Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature
of
_^The Kind You Have Always
Double-Thread, Lock Stitch.
Automatic Bobbing-Winder
Self-Threading Shuttle,
Latest Improved Attachments
SOLD BY
S BELL. Waynesboro, Ga.
Jnly28,1900— ■
Advertising rates liberal.
We go north and abroad to
designs, assortment of makes and h>
you visit Augusta then we’l! show
Church and School Organs always a
)0i.
THOMAS
AUG US'i a
IA
Agents for Stanc.rr
Southern Agents L
Proof Safes.
rire
>:
,*,£**i5 N
. . ’•