The Orange-Yellow Diamond. Fletcher Joseph Smith

The Orange-Yellow Diamond - Fletcher Joseph Smith


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the table at which Mr. Parminter and the police officials sat. And Mr. Parminter slowly rose and looked at Lauriston, and put his first question—in a quiet, almost suave voice, as if he and the witness were going to have a pleasant and friendly little talk together.

      "So your ambition is to be a writer of fiction?" he asked.

      "I am a writer of fiction!" replied Lauriston.

      Mr. Parminter pulled out a snuff-box and helped himself to a pinch.

      "Have you published much?" he enquired, drily.

      "Two or three stories—short stories."

      "Did they bring in much money?"

      "Five pounds each."

      "Have you done anything else for a living but that since you came to London two years ago?"

      "No, I haven't!"

      "How much have you earned by your pen since you came, now?"

      "About thirty pounds."

      "Thirty pounds in two years. What have you lived on, then?"

      "I had money of my own," replied Lauriston. "I had two hundred pounds when I left home."

      "And that gave out—when?" demanded Mr. Parminter.

      "Last week."

      "And so—you took your watch to the pawnshop. And—yesterday—your expected money not having arrived, you were obliged to visit the pawnshop again? Taking with you, you said just now, two rings—your own property. Am I correct?"

      "Quite correct—two rings—my own property."

      Mr. Parminter turned and spoke to a police official, who, lifting aside a sheet of brown paper which lay before him, revealed the tray of rings which Lauriston and Ayscough had found on the table in Multenius's parlour. At the same time, Mr. Parminter, lifting his papers, revealed Lauriston's rings. He picked them up, laid them on the palm of his hand, and held them towards the witness.

      "Are these the rings you took to the pawnshop?" he asked.

      "Yes!" replied Lauriston. "They were my mother's."

      Mr. Parminter indicated the tray.

      "Did you see this tray lying in the parlour in which you found the dead man?" he enquired.

      "I did."

      "Did it strike you that your own rings were remarkably like the rings in this tray?"

      "No, it did not," answered Lauriston. "I know nothing about rings."

      Mr. Parminter quietly passed the tray of rings to the Coroner, with Lauriston's rings lying on a sheet of paper.

      "Perhaps you will examine these things and direct the attention of the jurymen to them?" he said, and turned to the witness-box again. "I want to ask you a very particular question," he continued. "You had better consider it well before answering it—it is more important—to you—than may appear at first hearing. Can you bring any satisfactory proof that those two rings which you claim to be yours, really are yours?"

      There followed on that a dead silence in court. People had been coming in since the proceedings had opened, and the place was now packed to the door. Every eye was turned on Lauriston as he stood in the witness-box, evidently thinking deeply. And in two pairs of eyes there was deep anxiety: Melky was nervous and fidgety; Zillah was palpably greatly concerned. But Lauriston looked at neither—and he finally turned to Mr. Parminter with a candid glance.

      "The rings are mine," he answered. "But—I don't know how I can prove that they are!"

      A suppressed murmur ran round the court—in the middle of it, the Coroner handed the rings to a police official and motioned him to show them to the jurymen. And Mr. Parminter's suave voice was heard again.

      "You can't prove that they are yours."

      "May I explain?" asked Lauriston. "Very well—there may be people, old friends, who have seen those two rings in my mother's possession. But I don't know where to find such people. If it's necessary, I can try."

      "I should certainly try, if I were you," observed Mr. Parminter, drily.

      "Now, when did those two rings come into your possession?"

      "When my mother died," replied Lauriston.

      "Where have you kept them?"

      "Locked up in my trunk."

      "Have you ever, at any time, or any occasion, shown them to any person? Think!"

      "No," answered Lauriston. "I can't say that I ever have."

      "Not even at the time of your mother's death?"

      "No! I took possession, of course, of all her effects. I don't remember showing the rings to anybody."

      "You kept them in your trunk until you took them out to raise money on them?"

      "Yes—that's so," admitted Lauriston.

      "How much money had you—in the world—when you went to the pawnshop yesterday afternoon?" demanded Mr. Parminter, with a sudden keen glance.

      Lauriston flushed scarlet.

      "If you insist on knowing," he said. "I'd just nothing."

      There was another murmur in court—of pity from the sentimental ladies in the public seats, who, being well acquainted with the pawnshops themselves, and with the necessities which drove them there were experiencing much fellow-feeling for the poor young man in the witness-box. But Lauriston suddenly smiled—triumphantly.

      "All the same," he added, glancing at Mr. Parminter. "I'd forty pounds, in my letters, less than an hour afterwards. Ayscough knows that!"

      Mr. Parminter paid no attention to this remark. He had been whispering to the police inspector, and now he turned to the Coroner.

      "I should like this witness to stand down for a few minutes, sir," he said. "I wish to have Miss Wildrose recalled."

      The Coroner gently motioned Zillah to go back to the witness-box.

      CHAPTER TEN

      MELKY INTERVENES

      Zillah had listened to Lauriston's answers to Mr. Parminter's searching questions with an anxiety which was obvious to those who sat near her. The signs of that anxiety were redoubled as she walked slowly to the box, and the glance she threw at the Coroner was almost appealing. But the Coroner was looking at his notes, and Zillah was obliged to turn to Mr. Parminter, whose accents became more mellifluous than ever as he addressed her; Mr. Parminter, indeed, confronting Zillah might have been taken for a kindly benevolent gentleman whose sole object was to administer condolence and comfort. Few people in court, however, failed to see the meaning of the questions which he began to put in the suavest and softest of tones.

      "I believe you assisted your late grandfather in his business?" suggested Mr. Parminter.

      "Just so! Now, how long had you assisted him in that way?"

      "Ever since I left school—three years ago," replied Zillah.

      "Three years—to be sure! And I believe you had resided with him for some years before that?"

      "Ever since I was a little girl," admitted Zillah.

      "In fact, the late Mr. Multenius brought you up? Just so!—therefore, of course, you would have some acquaintance with his business before you left school?"

      "Yes—he taught me a good deal about it."

      "You were always about the place, of course—yes? And I may take it that you gradually got a good deal of knowledge about the articles with which your grandfather had to deal? To be sure—thank you. In fact, you are entitled to regard yourself as something of an expert in precious stones and metals?"

      "I know a good deal about them," replied Zillah.

      "You could tell the value of a thing as accurately as your grandfather?"

      "Ordinary things—yes."

      "And you were very well acquainted with your grandfather's stock?"

      "Yes."

      Mr.


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