Part 23 (2/2)
”I never touch paste.”
Sir Thomas failed to see the significance of this remark. Jimmy repeated it, with emphasis.
”I never touch paste,” he said, ”and Lady Blunt's necklace is, I regret to say, made of that material.”
Sir Thomas grew purple.
”Mind you,” said Jimmy, ”it's very good paste. I'll say that for it. I didn't see through it till I had it in my hands. Looking at the thing--even quite close--I was taken in for a moment.”
The baronet made strange, gurgling noises.
”Paste!” he said, speaking with difficulty. ”Paste! Paste! d.a.m.n your impertinence, sir! Are you aware that that necklace cost forty thousand pounds?”
”Then whoever paid that sum for it wasted a great deal of money. Paste it is, and paste it always will be.”
”It can't be paste. How do you know?”
”How do I know? I'm an expert. Ask a jeweler how he knows diamonds from paste. He can feel them. He can almost smell them.”
”Let me look. It's impossible.”
”Certainly. I don't know the extent of your knowledge of pearls. If it is even moderate, I think you will admit that I am right.”
Sir Thomas s.n.a.t.c.hed the necklace from the table and darted with it to the electric light. He scrutinized it, breathing heavily. Jimmy's prophecy was fulfilled. The baronet burst into a vehement flood of oaths, and hurled the glittering ma.s.s across the room. The unemotional mask of the man seemed to have been torn off him. He shook with futile pa.s.sion.
Jimmy watched him in interested silence.
Sir Thomas ran to the jewels, and would have crushed them beneath his feet, had not Jimmy sprang forward and jerked him away from them.
”Be quiet,” he said. ”Confound you, sir, will you stop that noise?”
Sir Thomas, unaccustomed to this style of address, checked the flood for a moment.
”Now,” said Jimmy, ”you see the situation. At present, you and I are the only persons alive, to the best of our knowledge, who know about this. Stay, though, there must be one other. The real necklace must have been stolen. It is impossible to say when. Years ago, perhaps.
Well, that doesn't affect us. The thief, whoever he is, is not likely to reveal what he knows. So here you have it in a nutsh.e.l.l. Let me go, and don't say a word about having found me here, and I will do the same for you. No one will know that the necklace is not genuine. I shall not mention the subject, and I imagine that you will not. Very well, then. Now, for the alternative. Give me up, give the alarm, and I get--well, whatever they give me. I don't know what it would be, exactly. Something unpleasant. But what do you get out of it? Lady Blunt, if I may say so, is not precisely the sort of lady, I should think, who would bear a loss like this calmly. If I know her, she will shout loudly for another necklace, and see that she gets it. I should fancy you would find the expense unpleasantly heavy. That is only one disadvantage of the alternative. Others will suggest themselves to you. Which is it to be?”
Sir Thomas suspended his operation of glaring at the paste necklace to glare at Jimmy.
”Well?” said Jimmy. ”I should like your decision as soon as it's convenient to you. They will be wanting me on the stage in a few minutes. Which is it to be?”
”Which?” snapped Sir Thomas. ”Why, go away, and go to the devil!”
”All in good time,” said Jimmy cheerfully. ”I think you have chosen wisely. Coming downstairs?”
Sir Thomas made no response. He was regarding the necklace moodily.
”You'd better come. You'll enjoy the show. Charteris says it's the best piece there's been since 'The Magistrate'! And he ought to know.
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