Part 28 (1/2)

Blue Aloes Cynthia Stockley 37390K 2022-07-22

”Hush, my child--hus.h.!.+” he gently urged. But she would not be hushed.

”I hate you,” she said pa.s.sionately. ”I curse the day I entered this shop, an innocent girl, and was beguiled by you and your son and my mad pa.s.sion for diamonds into becoming your tool and accomplice. Oh, how I hate you! I can never betray you because of my oath, but I curse you both, and I pray I may never see or hear of you again.”

”That's all right, my child,” he said soothingly. She threw him one glance of loathing and contempt and walked from the place.

Rosanne had taken to her bed again, and this time when they brought the doctor she was too ill to object, too ill to do anything but lie staring in a sort of mental and physical coma at the ceiling above her.

”Let her be,” said the old-fas.h.i.+oned family doctor, who had known her from babyhood. ”She has a splendid const.i.tution and will pull through.

But let her have no worries of any kind.”

So they left her alone, except in the matter of ministering occasional nourishment, which she took with the mechanical obedience of a child.

For two days Rosanne lay there, silent and strange. The third day her sickness took an acute form. She tossed and moaned and called out in her pain, her face twisted with torture. Her mind appeared to remain clear.

”Mother, I believe I am dying,” she said, after one such spell, during the afternoon. ”I feel as if something is tearing itself loose from my very being. Does it hurt like this when the soul is trying to escape from the body?”

”I have sent for the doctor again, darling.”

”It is nothing he can cure. It is _here_, and _here_ that I suffer.”

She touched her head and her heart. ”But, oh, my body, too, is tortured!”

She lay still a little while, moaning softly to herself while her mother stood by, sick with distress; then she said:

”Send for Denis Harlenden, mother. I must see him before I die.”

Mrs. Ozanne asked no question. Her woman's instinct told her much that Rosanne had left unsaid. Within half an hour, Harlenden was being shown into the drawing-room, where she awaited him. He came in with no sign upon his face of the anxiety in his heart. This was the fourth day since he had seen Rosanne, and she had sent him no word.

”Sir Denis, my daughter is very ill. I don't know why she should be calling out for you----” She faltered. Marks of the last few days'

anxiety were writ large upon her, but she was not wanting in a certain patient dignity.

Harlenden strode over and took her hands in his as he would have taken the hands of his own mother.

”It is because we love each other,” he said gently, ”and because, as soon as she will let me, I am going to marry her.”

A ray of thankfulness shone across her features.

”Marriage! I don't know, Sir Denis; but, if you love her I can tell you something that will help you to understand her better, and perhaps you can help her.”

Briefly, and in broken words, she related to him the strange incident of Rosanne's babyhood, its seeming effect upon her character, and the Malay's extraordinary words of two days before. She did not disguise from him that she believed Rosanne guilty, whether consciously or unconsciously, of many dark things, but she pleaded for her child the certainty that she had been in the clutches of forces stronger than herself.

”About the diamonds,” she finished, at last, ”I know nothing, and I am afraid to think. Did you read of that awful case of suicide in yesterday's paper--that man, Syke Ravenal, who has been robbing De Beers? I am tormented with the thought that she may have known something of him--yet how could she?”

”You must put such a thought out of your mind for ever and never mention it to a soul,” said Harlenden firmly. ”That man committed suicide because his only son had been killed by accident in Amsterdam.

He left a vast fortune and a number of jewels which had been taken from their settings to De Beers, by way of conscience-money for several thousand pounds' worth of diamonds in the rough which he had stolen from them. There is absolutely no evidence to connect any other person with his crime, except a letter asking the company to deal lightly with a native boy called Hiangeli, who had been a tool of his.”

”Then you think it could have nothing possibly to do with my poor child?”

”Certainly not,” said Denis Harlenden, without flinching.