Classic Audiobook Collection - The Castlecourt Diamond Mystery by Geraldine Bonner ~ Full Audiobook [mystery]
Episode Date: October 18, 2023The Castlecourt Diamond Mystery by Geraldine Bonner audiobook. Genre: mystery When the legendary Castlecourt diamonds vanish during London season, scandal threatens to swallow an aristocratic househo...ld whole. Staying at Burridge's Hotel instead of their own townhouse, Lady Castlecourt and her husband find themselves surrounded by servants, guests, and hangers-on, any of whom might have seen something, or might be hiding it. The mystery is told as a sequence of statements from the people closest to the case, beginning with Sophy Jeffers, the Marchioness' maid, who recounts the tense routines of service and the moment the jewels are discovered missing. One account leads to another, including the fascinating testimony of Lilly Bingham, better known by a trail of names on both sides of the Atlantic and to the police as Laura the Lady. With an official detective and a private investigator circling the same glittering prize, suspicion shifts from staff to society, from chance opportunity to deliberate design. As each voice adds new details, the reader must weigh gossip against evidence, kindness against calculation, and appearances against motive in a clever, manners-soaked puzzle of theft, identity, and social theater. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:27:45) Chapter 02 (01:07:41) Chapter 03 (01:26:26) Chapter 04 (01:46:09) Chapter 05 (02:12:07) Chapter 06 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Castle Court Diamond Mystery by Geraldine Bonner.
Statement of Sophie Jeffers, Ladies Made to the Martianess of Castlecourt.
I had been the Lady Castle's Court service two years when the Castle Court diamonds were stolen.
I'm not going to give an account of how I was suspected and cleared.
That's not the part of the story I'm here to set down.
It's about the disappearance of the diamonds that I'm to tell,
and I'm ready to do it to the best of it.
my ability. We were in London at Burrage's Hotel for this season. Lord Castlecourt's
townhouse at Grosvenor Gate was led to some rich Americans, and for two years now we had stayed at
Burrages. It was the 3rd of April when we came to town, my lord, my lady, Chalmers, my Lord's van,
and myself. The children had been sent to my lord's aunt, Lady Mary Cranberry, she who's unmarried,
and lives at Cranber Castle, near Worcester.
Lord Castlecourt didn't like going to the hotel at all.
Chalmers used to tell me how he'd talk sometimes.
Chalmers has been with my lord ten years,
and was born on the estate of Castlecourt Marsh Manor.
But my lord generally did what my lady wanted,
and she was not at all partial to the country.
She'd say to me,
she was always full of her jokes.
Yes, it's an excellent.
the country, an excellent place to get away from, Jevers, and the farther away you get,
the more excellent it seems. My lady had been born in Ireland, and lived there till she was a
woman grown. It's not for me to comment on my betters, but I've heard it said she didn't have
a decent frock to her back till old lady Bundy took her up and brought her to London. Her father was
a clergyman, the Reverend McCarran Duffy, of County Clare, and they do say he had an penny to a
his fortune, and that my lady ran wild in cotton frocks and with holes in her stockings,
till Lady Bundy saw her.
I've heard tell that Lady Bundy said of her that she'd be the most beautiful woman in London
since the Gunnings, whoever they were, and just brought her up to town and fitted her out
from top to toe. In a month she was the talk of the season, and before it was over she was
betrothed to the Marquis of Castlecourt, who was a great match for her. But she was
the beggar on horseback you hear people talk about. Lord Castlecourt wasn't what would be called
a millionaire, but he gave her more in a month than she'd had before in five years, and she'd
spent it all and want more. It seemed as if she didn't know the value of money. If she'd see a pretty
thing in a shop, she'd buy it, and if she had not got the ready money, they'd give her the credit.
for being the marchioness of castle court all the shop people were on their knees to her they were that anxious to get her patronage then when the bills would come in she would be quite surprised and wonder how she had come to spend so much and hide them from lord castle court
afterwards she'd forget all about them even where she'd put them lord castlecourt was so fond of her he'd have forgiven her anything they'd been married five years when i entered my lady's service and he was as much in love with her as if he'd been married but a month
and i don't blame him she was the prettiest lady and the most coaxing i ever laid eyes on she might well be irish there was blarney on her tongue for all the world and money ready to drop off
the ends of her fingers into any palm that was held out. There was no story of misfortune but would
bring the tears to her eyes and her purse to her hand. Generous and soft-hearted she was to every
creature that walked. No one could be angry with her long. I've seen Lord Castlecourt begin to scold
her and end by laughing at her and kissing her. Not but what she respected him and loved him.
She did both, and she was afraid of him, too. No one knew better than that.
than my lady when it was time to stop trifling with my lord and be serious.
It was Lord Castlecourt's custom to go to Paris two or three times every year.
He had a sister married there, of whom he was very fond,
and he and her husband would go off shooting boorers to a place with a name I can't remember.
My lady was always happy to go to Paris.
She'd say she loved it, and the theaters and the shops,
though what she could see in it I never understood.
a dirty, messy city, and full of men ready to ogle an honest Christian woman,
as if she was what half the women looked like that go prancing along the streets.
My lady spent a good deal of her time at the dressmakers,
and she and I were forever going up to top stories and little silly lifts
that go up of themselves.
I'd a great deal rather have walked than trust in myself to such unsafe French contrivances.
Underhand, dangerous things, that my burst at a
moment, I say, the year before the time I am writing of, we went to Paris, as usual, in March.
We stopped at the Bristol, and stayed one month. My lady went out a great deal, and between
Wells was, as usual, at what they call their courtiers, at the jewelers, or the shops on the
Rue de la Paix. She also bought from Bolkonsky, the furrier, a very smart jacket of Russian
sable, that I'll be bound cost a pretty penny. When we went back to London for the season,
her beauty and her costumes were the talk of the town. Old Lady Bundy's maid told me that Lady Bundy
went about saying, and but for me, she'd be the mother of the red-headed lyricans of an Irish
squirene, which didn't seem to me nice talk for a lady. We spent that summer at Castlecourt
Marsh Manor very quietly, as was my lord's wish.
My lady did not seem in as good spirits as usual, which I sat down to the country life that
she always said bored her.
Once or twice she told me that she felt ill, which I'd never known her to say before,
and, one day in the late summer, I discovered her in tears.
She did not seem to be herself again till we went to Paris in September.
Then she brightened up and was soon in higher spirits than ever.
She was on to go continually, often would go out for lunch, and not
be back till it was time to dress for dinner. She enjoyed herself in Paris very much, she told me,
and I think she did, for I never saw her more animated, almost excited with high spirits and
success. The following spring we left Castle Court Marsh Manor, and, as I said before,
came to Burrages on April the 3rd. The season was soon in full swing, and my lady was going out
morning, noon, and night. There was no end to it, and I was warm.
out. When she was away in the afternoon, I'd take forty winks on the sofa, and have Sarah Dwight,
the housemaid of our rooms, bring me a cup of tea, when she'd sometimes take one herself,
and we'd gossip a bit over it. If I'd known what an important person Sarah Dwight was going to turn
out, I'd have taken more notice of her, but, unfortunately, thieves don't have a mark on their
brow like cane, and Sarah was the last girl anyone would have suspected was dishonest.
All that I ever thought about her was that she was a neat, civil-spoken girl, who knew her
betters and her elders when she saw them. She was quick on her feet, modest and well-mannered,
not what you'd call good-looking, too pale and small for my taste, and Chalmers quite agreed
with me. The one thing I noticed about her were her hands, which were white and fine,
like a lady's. Once, when I asked her how she kept them so well, she laughed and said,
not having a pretty face, she tried to have pretty hands. Because a girl ought to have
something pretty about her, oughtn't she, Miss Jeffers? She said to me, quiet and respectful as could
be. I answered, as I thought it was my duty, that beauty was only skin deep, and if your
character was honest, your face would take care of itself.
She looked down at her hands, and smiled alone and said,
Yes, I suppose that's true, Miss Jeffers.
I'll try to remember it. It's what every girl ought to feel, I'm sure.
Sarah Dwight had the greatest admiration for Lady Castlecourt.
She'd managed to be standing about in doorways and on the stairs when my lady passed
down to go to dinner and to the opera. Then she'd come back and tell me how beautiful my lady was,
and how she envied me being her maid. While she was talking, she'd help me tidy up the room,
and sometimes, because she admired my lady so, I'd let her look at the new clothes from Paris
as they hung in the wardrobe. Sarah would gape with admiration over them. She spoke a little about
my lady's jewels, but not much. I'd have suspected that. It was in the fifth week after we came to town,
to be exact on the afternoon of the fourth day of May, that the diamonds were stolen. As I'd been so
badgered and questioned and tormented about it, I've got it all as clear in my head as a photograph,
just how it was and just what time everything happened. That evening, my lady was going to dinner at the
Duke of Duxberries. It was to be a great dinner, a prince, and a prime minister, and I don't know what all
besides. My lady was to wear a new gown from Paris and the diamonds. She told me, when she went out,
what she would want and when she would be back. That was at four, and I was not to expect her in till after six.
Some time before that, I got her things ready, the gown laid out, and the diamonds on the dressing
table. They were kept in the leather case of their own, and then put in a dispatch box that
shut with a patent lock. When we traveled, I always carried this box. That is, when my lady used it.
A good deal of the time it was at the bankers. Lord Castlecourt was very choice about the diamonds.
Some of them had been in his family for generations. The way they were set now, in a necklace with
pendants, the larger stones surrounded by smaller ones, had been a new setting made for his mother.
My lady wanted them changed, and I remember that Lord Castlecourt was vexed with her,
and she couldn't pet and coax him back into a good humor for some days.
One of the last things that I did that afternoon, while arranging the dressing table,
was to open the dispatch box and take the leather case out.
though it was may and the evenings were very long i turned on the electric lights and unclasping the case looked at the necklace i was standing this way when chalmers comes to the side door of the room the whole suite was connected with doors and asked me if i could remember the number of the boot-makers where my lady bought her riding boots some friend of chalmers wanted to know the address i couldn't at first remember it and i was standing this way trying to
to recollect, when I heard the clock strike six. I told Chalmers I'd get it for him. I was certain it was
in my lady's desk, and I put the case down on the bureau, and Chalmers and I together went into
the sitting-room. The door opened between us and my lady's room, and looked for it. We found it in a
minute, and Chalmers was writing it down in his pocketbook when I thought I heard. So light and soft
you could hardly say you heard anything. A rustle like a woman's skirt in my own.
the next room. For a second I thought it was my lady, and I jumped, for I'd no business at her
desk, and I knew she'd be vexed and scold me. Chalmers didn't hear a thing, and looked at me
astonished. Then I ran to the door and peeped in. There was no one there, and I thought,
of course, I'd been mistaken. We didn't leave the room directly, but stood by the desk talking
for a bit. When I told this to the detectives, one of the papers said it showed,
How deceptive even the best servants were.
As if a valet and a lady's maid couldn't stop for a moment of talk.
Poor things!
We work hard enough most of the time, I'm sure,
and that we weren't long standing there idle can be seen
from the fact that I heard half-past six strike.
I was for urging Chalmers to go then,
as Lady Castlecourt might be in at any moment,
but he hung about, following me into my lady's room,
helping me draw the curtains and turn on all the lights,
for my lady can't bear to dress by daylight.
It was nearly seven o'clock when we heard the sound of her skirts in the passage.
Chalmers slipped off into his master's rooms, shutting the door quietly behind him.
My lady was looking very beautiful.
She had on a blue hat, trimmed with blue and gray hydrangeous,
and underneath it her hair was like spun gold,
and her eyes looked soft and dark.
It never seemed to tire her to be always on the go.
but i thought lately she had been going too much for sometimes she was pale and once or twice i thought she was out of spirits the way she'd been in the country last summer
she seemed so to-night not talking as much as usual there were some letters for her on the corner of the dressing-table and i could see her face in the glass as she read them one made her smile and then she sat thinking and biting her lip which was as red as a cherry
she seemed to me to be preoccupied when i was making the side undulations of her hair which everybody knows is the most critical operation she jerked her head and said suddenly she wondered how the children were
i never before knew my lady to think about the children when her hair was being attended to she was sitting in front of the dressing-table her toilet-complete when she stretched out her hand to the leather case of the diamonds
I was looking at the reflection in the mirror, thinking that she was as perfect as I could make her.
She, too, had been looking at the back of her head, and still held the small glass in one hand.
The other she reached out for the diamonds.
The case had a catch that you had to press, and I saw, to my surprise, that she raised the lid
without pressingness.
Then she gave a loud exclamation.
There were no diamonds there.
She turned round and looked at me and said,
How odd! Where are they, Jeffers? I felt suddenly as if I was going to fall dead, and afterward,
when my lady stood by me and said it was nonsense to suspect me, one of the things she brought up as a
proof of my innocence was the color I turned, and the way I looked at that moment.
Jeffers, she said, suddenly rising up quick out of her chair, and then, without my saying a word,
she went white and stood staring at me.
"'My lady, my lady, was all I could falter out.
"'I don't know. I don't know.
"'Where are they, Jeffers? What's happened to them?'
"'My voice was all husky like a person's with a cold, and I stammered.
"'They were in the case an hour ago.'
"'My lady caught me by the arm, and her fingers gripped tight into my flesh.
"'Don't say they're stolen, Jeffers,' she cried out.
"'Don't tell me that. Lord Castlecourt would never forgive me.
he'll never forgive me.
There were thousands and thousands of pounds.
They can't have been stolen.
She spoke so loud they heard her in the next room,
and Lord Castlecourt came in.
He was a tall gentleman, a little bald,
and I can see him now in his black clothes,
with the white of his shirt-bosom gleaming,
standing in the doorway looking at her.
He had a surprised expression on his face,
and was frowning a little,
for he hated anything like loud talking or a scene.
What's the matter, Gladys, he said.
You're making such a noise, I heard you in my room.
Is there a fire?
She made a sort of grasp at the case and tried to hide it.
Chalmers was in the doorway behind my lord,
and I saw him staring at her in trying not to.
He told me afterwards she was as white as paper.
The diamonds, she faltered out,
your diamonds, your families, your mothers.
Lord Castlecourt gave a start and seemed to stiffen.
He did not move from where he was, but stood rigid, looking at her.
What's the matter with them, he said, quick and quiet, but not as if he was calm.
She threw the case she had been trying to hide on the dressing table.
It knocked over some bottles, and lay there open and empty.
My lord sprang at it, took it up, and shook it.
Gone, he said, turning to my lady.
Stolen, do you mean?
Yes, yes, yes, she said, like that, three times,
and then she fell back in the chair and put our hands over her face.
Lord Castlecourt turned to me.
What's this mean, Jeffers?
You've had charge of the diamonds.
I told him all I knew.
and as well as I could, what with my legs trembling that they scarce support me, and my tongue
dry as a piece of leather. When I got toward the end, my lady interrupted me, crying out,
Herbert, it isn't my fault, it isn't. Jeffers would tell you I've taken good care of them.
I've not been careless or forgetful about them, as I have about other things. I have been
careful of them. It isn't my fault, and you mustn't blame me.
Lord Castlecourt made a sort of gesture toward her to be still.
I could see it meant that.
He kept the case, and, going to the door, locked it.
How long have you been in these rooms, he said, turning round on me with a key in his hand?
I told him, trembling, and almost crying,
I had never seen my lord look so terribly stern.
I don't know whether he was angry or not, but I was afraid of him,
and it was for the first time,
for he'd always been a kind and generous master to me
and the other servants.
Oh, my lord, I said,
feeling suddenly weighed down with dread and misery.
You surely don't think I took them.
I'm not thinking anything, he said.
You and Chalmers are to stay in this room
and not move from it till you get my orders.
I'll send it once for the police.
My lady turned round in her chair and looked at him.
the police she said oh herbert wait till to-morrow you're not even sure yet that they are stolen where are they then he says quick and sharp jeffrethes says she saw them in that case an hour ago they are not in the case now do either you or she know where they are
i was down on my knees picking up the bottles that had been knocked over by the empty jewel-case not i god knows i said and i began to cry
the matter must be put in the hands of the police at once my lord said i'll have the hotel policeman here in a few minutes and the rooms searched jeffers and chalmers and their luggage will be searched to-morrow my lady gave a sort of gasp i was close to her feet and i heard her
but for myself i just broke down and kneeling on the floor with the overturned bottle spilling cologne all around me cried worse than i've done since i was in short frocks
oh my lady i didn't take them i didn't you know i didn't i sobbed out my lady looked very miserable my poor jeffers she said and put her hand on my shoulder i'm sure you didn't if i'd only a sixpence in the world i'd stake that on your honor
honesty. Lord Castlecourt didn't say anything. He went to the bell and pressed it. When the boy answered it, he gave him a message in a low tongue, and it didn't seem five minutes before two men were in the room. I did not know till afterward that one was the manager, and the other the hotel policeman. I stopped my crying the best I could, and heard my lord telling them that the diamonds were gone, and that Chalmers and I had been the only people in the room all the afternoon.
Then he said he wanted them to communicate at once with Scotland Yard and have a capable detective sent to the hotel.
Lady Castlecourt and I are going to dinner, he said, looking at his watch.
We will have to leave at the latest within the next twenty minutes.
Lady Castlecourt cried out at that.
Herbert, I don't see how I can go to that dinner.
I am altogether too upset.
And, besides, it will be too late.
It's eight o'clock now.
we can make the time up in the carriage my lord said and he went into the next room with a policeman where they talked together in low voices i helped my lady on with a cloak and she stood waiting her eyebrows drawn together looking very pale and worried
when my lord came back he said nothing only nodded to my lady that he was ready and without a word they left the room
i tried to tidy the bureau and pick up the bottles as well as i could and every time i looked at the door into the sitting-room i saw that policeman's head peering round the door-post at me
that was an awful night i did not know it till afterward but both chalmers and i were under what they called surveillance i did not know either that lord castlecourt had told the policeman he believed us to be innocent that we were of excellent character and nothing but that we were of excellent character and nothing but that we were of excellent character and nothing
a positive proof would make him think either of us guilty. All I felt, as I tossed about in bed,
was that I was suspected, and would be arrested, and probably put in jail. Fifteen years of honest
service and noble families wouldn't help me much if the detectives took it into their heads. I was
guilty. The next morning we heard about the disappearance of Sarah Dwight, and things began to
look brighter. Sarah had left the hotel at a little after seven the evening before.
speaking to no one and carrying a small portmanteau when they came to examine her room and her box they found a jacket and skirt hanging on the wall some burnt papers in the grate
and the box almost empty except for some cheap cotton underclothes and a dirty wadded quilt put in to fill up sarah had given no notice and had not at any time told any of her fellow-servants that she was dissatisfied with her place
or wanted to leave.
That morning Mr. Brisson, the Scotland Yard detective,
had us up in the sitting-room asking us questions till I was fair muddled
and didn't know truth from lies.
Lord Castlecourt and my lady were both present,
and Mr. Brisson was forever politely asking my lady questions,
till she got quite angry with him,
and said she wasn't at all sure the diamonds were stolen.
They might have been mislaid,
and would turn up somewhere. Mr. Brisson was surprised and asked my lady if she had any idea where
they were liable to turn up, and my lady looked annoyed, and said it was a silly question and that she
wasn't a clairvoyant. Three days after this, Mr. Johnny Gilsey, who is a detective, and, I have heard since,
a very famous gentleman, was engaged by Lord Castlecourt to work upon the case. Mr. Gilsy was
very soft-spoken and pleasant. He did not muddle you, as Mr. Brisson did, and it was very easy to tell him
all you knew or could remember, which he always seemed anxious to hear. He had me up in the sitting
room twice, once alone and once with Mr. Brisson, and they asked me a host of questions about
Sarah Dwight. I told them all I could think of, and when I came to her hands, and how they were
white and fine, like a lady's, I saw Mr. Brisson look at Mr. Gilsey and raise his eyebrows.
Does it seem to you, he says, scribbling words in his notebook, that this sounds like
Laura the lady? And Mr. Gilsey answered, The manner of operating sounds like her, I must admit.
She was in Chicago when last heard of, said Mr. Brisson, stopping and scribbling.
But we've information within the last week that she's left there.
laura the lady is in london mr gilsey remarked looking at his finger-nails i saw her three weeks ago at earl's court mr brisson got red in the face and puffed out his lips as if he was going to say something but decided not to
he scribbled some more and then looking at what he had written as if he was reading it over says if that's the case there is very little doubt as to who planned and executed this robbery
that's a very comfortable state of affairs to arrive at says mr gilsey and i hope it's the correct one and that was all he said that time about what he thought after this we stayed on at burriages for the rest of the season but it was not half as cheerful or gay as it had been before
my lord was often moody and cross for he felt the loss of the diamonds bitterly and my lady was out of spirits and moat for she was very fond of him
and to have him take it this way seemed to upset her mr briso or mr gilsey were constantly popping in and murmuring in the sitting-room but they got no further on at least there was no talk of finding the diamonds which was all that counted
this is all i know of the theft of the necklace what happened at that time and what mr gilsey calls the surrounding circumstances of the case i have tried to put down as clearly and as simply as possible
I have gone over them so often and been forced to be so careful that I think they will be found to be quite correct in every particular.
End of Chapter 1
Read by Nancy Cochran Gergen, Gilbert, Arizona, April 17, 2021.
Chapter 2 of the Castle Court Diamond Mystery
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Read by Jen Broda
The Castle Court Diamond Mystery by Geraldine Bonner
Statement of Lily Bingham, known in England as Laura Bryce,
in the United States as Francis Latimer,
to the police of both countries as Laura the Lady,
besides having recently figured as a housemaid at Burridge's Hotel,
London, under the alias of Sarah Dwight.
I never was so glad of anything in my life as to get out of that beastly whole Chicago.
I'll certainly never go back there unless there is an inducement big enough to compensate
for the elevated railroad, the lake, the noise, the winds, the restaurants, the climate,
and the people. Oh, what a nightmare.
England's the country for me, and London is the focus of it. You can live like a Christian here,
and enjoy all the refinements and decencies of life for a reasonable consideration.
How my heart leaped when I saw the old gray, sooty walls looming up through the river haze.
I thought it best to sneak by the back, because if I go up the front stairs and ring the bell,
there may be loiterers round who had seen Laura the lady before
and might become impertinently curious about her future movements.
And then, when I saw Tom waiting for me,
my own Tom, that I lawfully married,
in a burst of affection three years ago at Leamington,
I shouted out greetings and danced on the deck and waved my handkerchief.
It was worthwhile having lived in Chicago for a year,
year to come back to London and Tom and a little furnished flat in Knightsbridge. We were very
respectable and quiet for a month, just a few collars climbing up the front stairs and demure female
tea parties at intervals. I bought plants to put in the windows and did knitting in a conspicuous
solitude which the neighbors could overlook. When I saw the maiden lady opposite scrutinizing me
through an opera glass, I felt like sending her my marriage certificate to run her eye over and return.
We even hired a maid of all work from an agency as a touch of local color on this worthy domestic
picture. But when the Castlecourt diamond scheme began to ripen, I nagged at her till she was impudent
and bundled her off. Ma Dirlin came in then, put on a cap and apron, and played her part a good
deal better than she used to when she acted so brets in the vaudeville.
We were two weeks lying low, maturing our plans,
though when I left Chicago, I knew what I was coming back for.
Outwardly, all was the same as usual.
The decent callers still climbed the front stairs,
and elderly ladies, who, without any stretch of imagination,
might have been my mother and aunts, dropped in for tea.
I used to wonder how the people on the floor below, they were the family of a man who made
rubber tires for bicycles, would have felt if they could have seen Maude, our neat and respectable
slavey, sitting with the French heels of her slippers caught on the third shelf of the bookcase,
dropping cigarette ashes into the waste paper basket.
When all was ready, Tom and I left for a business trip on the continent.
We went away in a four-wheeler, driven by handsome Harry, the top piled with luggage,
my face at the window smiling a last, cautioning goodbye at Maud.
Five days later, under the name of Sarah Dwight, I was installed as housemaid on the third floor
of Burridge's Hotel. I had done work of that kind before, once in New York, at another time in Paris,
Having been born and spent my childhood in that cheerful city, my French is irreproachable.
The famous robbery of the Comtesse de Chattagays rubies was my work, but I mustn't brag about past exploits.
I had never been engaged in a hotel theft of the importance of the Castle Court won.
The necklace was valued at between 8,000 and 9,000 pounds.
The stones were not so remarkable for size.
as for quality. They were of an unusually even excellence and pure water.
After I had been in the hotel for a few days and watched the Castlecourt party,
all apprehension left me, and I felt confident and cool. They were an extremely simple layout.
Lady Castlecord was a beauty, a seductive, smiling, white and gold person,
without any sense at all. Her husband adored her, being a man of some brains, that was what might have been
expected. What might not have been expected was that she appeared to reciprocate his affection.
Having made a careful study of the manners and customs of the upper classes, I was not prepared for this.
I note it as one of those exceptions to rule which occur now and then in the animal kingdom.
Besides the Marquis and his lady, there were a maid and a valet to be considered.
The former was a dense, honest woman named Sophie Jeffers, close on to 40,
and of the unredeemed ugliness of the normal ladies' maid.
Such being the case, it was natural to find that she was in love with Chalmers,
the valet, who was 27 and good-looking.
Jeffers was too truthful to tamper with her own age, but she did not feel it necessary to keep up the same
rigid standard when it came to Chalmers. It was less of a lie to make him ten years older than herself
ten years younger. From these facts, I drew my deductions as to the sort of adversary Jeffers
might be, and I found that, by a modest avoidance of Chalmers' society, I could make her my life
long friend. The evening of the Duke of Duxbury's dinner was the time I decided upon as the most
convenient for taking the stones. I had heard from Jeffers that the Marquis and Marchioness were going.
When her ladyship left her rooms that afternoon, I heard her tell Jeffers that she would not be back
till after six and to have everything ready at that hour. Off and on for the next two hours, I
I was doing work about the corridor with a duster. It was near six when I heard the two servants
talking in the sitting room. A bird's eye view through the keyhole showed me where they were
and that they were engaged in searching for something in the desk. It was my chance. With my housemaids
pass key, I opened the door a crack and peeked in. The leather case of the diamonds stood on the
dressing table not 20 feet from the door. It did not take five minutes to enter, open the case,
take the necklace, and leave. Jeffers heard me. She was in the room almost as I closed the door.
Before she could have got into the hall, I was in the broom closet hunting for a dustpan.
But she, evidently suspected nothing, for the door did not open and there was no indication of disturbance.
Two days later, Tom and I returned from our business trip to the continent.
I quite prided myself on the way our luggage was labeled.
It had just the right knock-about, piebald look.
We drove up in a four-wheeler, handsome hairy on the box, and Maude opened the door for us.
For the next few days, we were quiet and kept indoors.
We spent the time peacefully in the kitchen,
breaking the settings of the diamonds and reading about the robbery in the papers.
As soon as things simmered down, Tom was to take the stones across to Holland, where they would be
distributed. We threw away the settings and put the diamonds in a small box of chamois
skin that I pinned to my corset with a safety pin. That was the way things were,
untroubled as a summer sea, till ten days after.
our return when I began to get restive. I had had what they call in America a strenuous time at Burritch's,
working like a slave all day, with not a soul to speak to but a parcel of ignorant servant women,
and I wanted livening up. I longed for the light and noise of Piccadilly, the crowd and restaurants,
but what I wanted particularly was to go to the theater and see a place.
called the Forgiven Prodigal.
Maud and Tom raised a clamor of disapproval.
What was the use of running risks?
Did I think, because I'd been in Chicago for nearly a year that I was forgotten?
Did I think the men in Scotland Yard, who knew me, were all dead?
Did I think the excitement of the Castle Court robbery was over and done?
I yawned at them and told them with a gentle smile,
that they were a pusillanimous pair.
There might be many men in Scotland Yard who knew me,
and that, as they say in Chicago,
is all the good it would do them.
They couldn't arrest me for sitting peacefully at a theater
looking at a play.
As for connecting me with Sarah Dwight,
I would give anyone a hundred pounds who,
when I was dressed and had my war paint on,
would find me in a single suggestion
of the late housemaid at Burbank.
So I talked them down, and if I didn't convince them of the reasonableness of my arguments,
I at least managed to soothe their fears. I dressed myself with a special care, and when the
last ride of my toilet was accomplished, looked critically in the glass to see if anything of
Sarah Dwight remained. The survey contented me. Sarah's mother, if there be such a person, would have
denied me. I was all in black, a sweeping, spangly dress I had bought in New York, low-cut,
and my neck is not my weak point, especially when a clem de violets has been rubbed over it.
My hair was waved, Ma does it very well, much better than she cooks, I regret to say,
and dressed high with a small red wreath of geraniums round it. Nose-powdered to a
a probable, ladylike whiteness, a touch of rouge, a tiny moosh near the corner of one eye,
and long black gloves, and presto change. I wore no jewels, their owners might recognize them.
One could hardly say I wore the castle court diamonds, which were fastened to my corset with a
safety pin. They were rather uncomfortable, but they were the only thing about me that were.
As I stood in front of the glass, putting on finishing touches,
Maude left the room and went to the drawing room to watch for handsome Harry,
who was to drive our handsome.
I did not like taking a higher driver, and thank goodness I didn't.
I was putting on a last susson of scarlet on my lips when she came back,
stepping softly and with her eyes round and uneasy looking.
I don't know whether I'm nervous.
she says, but there's a man just gone by in a handsome, and he leaned out and looked hard at our windows.
I hope it amused him, I said, looking critically at my lips, to see if they were not a little
too incredibly ruddy. It is a harmless and innocent way of passing the time, so we mustn't be hard
on him if he doesn't happen to be very intellectual. Come, help me on with my cloak, and don't stand
there like patience on a monument staring at thieves. I was irritated with Maude,
trying to upset my peace of mind that way. She'd had any amount of good times while I'd been at
Burrages with my nose to the grindstone, and here she was, the first time I'd got a chance to have a
spree, looking like a depressed owl, and talking like the warning voice of conscience. As she
silently held up my cloak and I thrust my hand in the sleeve, I said,
over my shoulder, and you needn't go upsetting Tom by telling him about strange men and
handsoms who stare up in our front windows. I want to have a good time this evening,
not feel that I'm sitting by a guilty being who jumps every time he's spoken to as if the
curse of Cain was on him. Maud said nothing, and I shook myself into my cloak and swept out
to the hall, where Tom was waiting. There had been a slight fog all afternoon, and now it was
thick, not a pea-soup one, but a good, damp, obscuring fog, a regular burglar's delight.
As we came down the steps, we saw the two handsome lamps making blurs, like lights behind
white cotton screens. Tom was grumbling about it and about going out generally as he helped me in,
And just at that minute, still and quick, like a picture going across a magic lantern slide,
I saw a man on the other side of the street step out of the shadow of a porch
and glide swiftly and softly past the light of the lamp and up the street
to where the form of a waiting handsome loomed.
It was all very simple and natural, but his walk was awed,
so noiseless and stealthy.
I got in and Tom followed me. He hadn't seen anything. For the moment, I didn't speak of it
because I wasn't sure, but I've got to admit that my heart beat against the Castlecourt
diamonds harder than was comfortable. We started and I listened, and faintly, some way behind us,
I heard the curlump, curlump, of another horse's hooves on the asphalt. I leaned forward over the door
and tried to look back.
Through the mist, I saw the two yellow eyes of the handsome behind us.
Tom asked me what was the matter, and I told him.
He whistled, a long, single note, then leaned back very steady and still.
We didn't say anything for a bit, but just sat tight and listened.
It kept behind us that way for about ten minutes.
Then I pushed up the trap and said to Harry,
What's this handsome behind us up to, Harry?
That's what I want to know, he says, quiet and low.
Lose it if you can without being too much of a G-Hugh.
I answered and shut the trap.
He tried to lose it, and we began a chase,
slow at first, and then faster and faster,
down one street and up the other.
The fog by this time was as thick and white as wool,
and we seemed to break through it like a ship
as if we were going through something dense and hard to penetrate.
It seemed to me too a maddeningly quiet night.
There was no traffic, no noise of wheels to get mixed with ours.
The curlump, of our horse's hooves
came back as clear as sounds in a calm at sea
from the long lines of house fronts.
And that devilish-handsome never lost us.
It just kept the same distance behind us.
We could hear its horse's hooves, like an echo of our own, beating through the fog.
It got no nearer, it went no faster.
It did not seem in a hurry.
It never deviated from our track.
There was something hideously unagitated and cool about it,
a sort of deadly, sinister persistence.
I saw it in imagination like a live monster.
with bulging yellow eyes, staring with gloating greediness at us as we ran feebly along before it.
Tom didn't say much. He doesn't in moments like this. He's got the nerve all right,
but not the brain. There's no inventive ability in Tom. He's not built for crises.
Handsome Harry now and then dropped some remark through the trap, which was like a trickle of icy water
down one spine. I began to realize that my lips were dry and that the insides of my gloves were damp.
I knew that whatever was to be done had to come from me. I'd got them into this, and as they say in
Chicago, it was up to me to get them out. I leaned over the doors and looked at the street we
were going through. I know that part of London like a book, the insides of some of the houses
as well as the outsides. It's a part of our business in which I'm supposed to be quite an expert.
The street was a small one near Walworth Crescent. The house is not the smartest in the locality,
but good, solid, reliable buildings inhabited by good, solid, reliable people.
The lower floors were all alight. It was the heart of the season, and in many of them there
were dinners afoot. I thought, with a flash of longing, such as a drowning man might feel if he thought
of suddenly finding himself on Terra Firma, of serene, smiling people sitting down to soup. I'd have given the
Castlecourt diamonds at that moment to have been sitting down with them to cold soup, sour soup,
greasy soup, any kind of soup, only to be sitting down to soup. We turned a corner sharp,
going now at a tearing pace, and I saw before us a length of street wrapped in fog,
and blurred at regular intervals by the lights of lamps. It looked ghost-like, so white, so noiseless,
lined on either side by dim house fronts blotted with an indistinct sputter of lights.
There was not a sound but our own horse's hoofbeats, and far off, like a noise muffled by cotton wool,
the echo of our pursuers.
Through the opaque, motionless atmosphere,
I saw that the vista into which I stared was deserted.
There was not a human figure or vehicle in sight.
It was a lull, a brief respite,
a moment of incalculable value to us.
My mind was as clear as crystal,
and I felt a sense of cool, high exhilaration.
I have only felt this way in desperate,
moments, and this was a truly desperate moment, a pursuer on our heels and the diamonds in my
possession. I leaned over the doors and looked up the line of houses. It was Farley Street.
Who lived in Farley Street? Suddenly, I remembered that I knew all about the people who lived in number
15. They were Americans named Kennedy, a man, his wife, and a little girl.
He was manager of the London branch of a Chicago concern called the Colonial Box, Tom, and Courage Company, that I had often heard of in America.
We had marked the house and made extensive investigations before I left, intending to add it to our list, as Mrs. Kennedy had some handsome jewelry and silver.
Since my return, I had seen her name in the papers at various entertainments, and Mod had told me a lot
about her social successes. She was pretty, and people were taking her up. All this, that it takes me
some minutes to tell, flashed through my mind in a revolution of the wheels. I could see now that the
windows of number 15 were lit up. The Kennedys were evidently at home, perhaps had it
dinner on. They, along with the rest of the world, would in a minute be sitting down to soup.
They might be sitting down now. It was close on to half-past eight. Why could we not sit down with them?
I lifted the top and said to Harry. Is the handsome round the corner yet?
No, he answered. It's our only chance. There's still a bit behind us. I can tell by the sound.
Drive to number 15, second from the corner, I said, and go as if the devil was after you.
I dropped the trap, and as we tore down to number 15, I spoke in a series of broken sentences to Tom.
We're going into dinner here. You must look as if it was all right. If we carry it off well,
they won't dare to question. We are Major and Mrs. Thatcher of the Lancers that arrived Saturday from India.
They're Americans and won't know anything so you can say about what you like.
Give them India hot from the pan.
I've been living in London while you've been away.
That's how I come to know them and you don't.
My Christian names Ethel.
Do the dull, heavy ha-ha style.
Americans expect it.
We brought up to the curb with a jerk, threw back the doors, and dashed up the steps.
I caught a vanishing glimpse of handsome Harry leaning forward to lash the horse as the handsome went bounding off into the fog.
As we stood, pressed against the door, Tom whispered,
What the devil is their name?
Kennedy, I hissed at him. Cassius P. Kennedy.
Came originally from Necropolis City, Ohio, lived in Chicago as a clerk in the colonial box, tub, and cordage company,
and then was made manager of the London branch.
Their weak point is society.
If any people are there, keep your mouth shut.
Be dense and unresponsive.
We heard the rattle of the pursuing handsome at the end of the street.
Then through the ground glass of the door,
saw a man-servants approaching figure.
Only stay a few minutes over the coffee.
We're going on to the opera.
I whispered as the door opened.
I swept in,
Tom on my heels. We came as fast as we could without actually falling in and dashing the servant
aside, for the noise of our pursuer was loud in our ears, and we knew we were lost if we were
seen entering. As Tom somewhat hastily shut the door, I was conscious of the expression of
surprise on the face of the solemn butler. He did not say anything, but looked it. I slid out of my cloak
and handed it languidly to him.
No, I won't go upstairs,
I said in answer to his glare of growing a maze.
Then I turned to the glass in the hat-rack
and began to arrange my hair.
I could see, reflected in it,
a pair of portires,
half open, and affording a glimpse of a room beyond,
bathed in the subdued rosy light of lamps.
I was conscious of movement there behind the portiards,
a stir of skirts, a sort of hush of curiosity.
There had been the sound of voices when we came in.
Now I noticed the stealthy, occasional sibilant of a whisper.
There was no dinner party.
We were going to dine en familia.
So much the better.
My hair neat, I turned to the butler.
And touching the jet of my corsage with an arranging hand,
murmured, Major and Mrs. Thatcher, the man drew back the curtain, and with our name going before us
in loud announcement, I rustled into the room, Tom behind me. Standing beside an empty fireplace
and facing the entrance in attitudes of expectancy were a young man and woman. In the soft pink
lamplight, I had an impression of their two astonished faces, or rather astonished eyes, for they
were making a spirited struggle to obliterate all surprise from their faces. The woman was succeeding
the best. She did it quite well. When she saw me, she smiled, almost naturally, and came forward with a fair
imitation of a hostess's welcoming manner. She was young and very pretty, a fine, featured delicate woman
in a floating lace teagown. Her hand was thin and small, a real American hand, and gleamed with rings.
I could see her husband out of the tail of my eye, battling with his amazement and staring at Tom.
Tom was behind me, looming up bulkily, not saying anything, but looking blankly through the glass
wedged in his eye and pulling his mustache. My dear Mrs. Kennedy,
I said in my sweetest and most languid drawl.
Are we late?
I hope not.
There is such a fog.
Really, I thought we'd never get here.
My fingers touched her hand, and my eyes looked into hers.
She was immensely curious and upset, but she smiled boldly and almost easily.
I could see her inward wrestling to place me,
and to wonder if she could possibly have asked us,
and had forgotten that, too.
And at last, I continued glibly,
I am able to present my husband.
I was afraid you were beginning to think
he was a sort of Mrs. Harris.
Harry, dear, Mrs. and Mr. Kennedy.
They all bowed.
Tom held out his big paw
and took her little hand for a moment,
and then dropped it.
He had just the stolid, awkward owl
look of a certain kind of army man.
Awfully glad to get here, I'm sure.
He boomed out, and then he said,
What?
And looked at Mr. Kennedy.
Mr. Kennedy was not as much master of the situation as his wife.
He wasn't exactly frightened,
but he was inwardly distracted with not knowing what to do.
Please to meet you, he said loudly to Tom,
quite forgetting his English accent.
Glad you could get around here. Foggy night all right. I looked at the clock.
Tom stood solemnly on the hearth-rug, staring at the fire. The Kennedys, for a moment,
could think of nothing to say, and I had to look at the clock again, screw up my eyes,
and remark. Just half past. We're not really late at all. You know, Harry is such a punctual person,
and he's afraid I've got into un punctual habits while he's been away.
He has been away for some time, hasn't he?
said Mrs. Kennedy, looking from one to the other with piquant eyes that yearned for information.
Four years with the launchers in India, Tom boomed out again.
The Kennedys were relieved.
They got hold of something.
They both sat down, and it was obvious that they gathered themselves together.
for new efforts. I did likewise. I realized that I must be biographical to a reasonable extent,
just enough to satisfy curiosity, without giving the impression that I was sitting down to tell my
life story the way the heroine does in the first act of the play. He arrived only last Saturday,
I said, and you may imagine how pleased I was to be able to bring him tonight in answer to
your kind invitation.
Only too glad he could have come, murmured Mrs. Kennedy, oblivious of the terrified side-glance
that her husband cast in her direction. Very fortunate that you had this one evening disengaged.
I'm taking him about everywhere, I continued with girlish loquacity. People had begun to
think that Major Thatcher was a myth, and I'm showing them that there's a good deal
him, and he's very much alive. Four years now, you know, I've been living here, first in those
miserable lodgings in Half Moon Street, and after that in my flat. You know it on Gower Street.
A nice little place enough, but much nicer now with Harry in it.
Of course, said Mrs. Kennedy, as sympathetically as was compatible with her eagerness to pounce upon
such crumbs of information as I let drop.
How dull these four years must have been for you.
Dull, I echoed, dull is not the word,
and I gave my eyes an expressive, acrobatic roll toward the ceiling.
She couldn't have stood it out there, said Tom in an unexpected bass growl.
Too hot, Ethel can't stand the heat, never could.
Then he lapsed into silence, staring at the fire under Mr. Kennedy's fascinated gaze.
Dinner was just then announced, and I heard him saying as he walked in behind us,
Is India very hot, Mrs. Kennedy? Once in Delhi, I sat for four days in a cold bath and read the Waverly novels.
To which Mrs. Kennedy answered brightly,
I should think that would have put you to sleep and you might have been drowned.
That was one of the most remarkable dinners I ever sat through.
Of the two couples, the Kennedys were the least at ease.
They were more afraid of being found out than we were.
The cold sweat would break out on Mr. Kennedy's brow
when the conversation edged up toward the subject of previous meetings,
and Mrs. Kennedy would begin to talk fervishly about other things.
She was the kind of woman who hates to be unequal to any social emergency,
and I am bound to confess, considering how unprepared she was,
she held her own this time with tact and spirit.
She had the copious flow of small talk so many Americans seemed to have at command,
and it rippled fluently and untiringly on from the soup to the savory.
I added to the impression I had already made by alluding to various titled friends of mine,
letting their names drop carelessly from my lips as the pearls and diamonds fell from the mouth of the virtuous princess.
Tom did well, too, exceedingly well.
When the conversation showed signs of languishing, he began about India.
He gave us some strange pieces of information about that distant land
that I think he invented on the spur of the moment,
and he told several anecdotes which were quite deadly and without point.
When they were concluded, he gave a short, deep laugh, let his eyeglass fall out,
looked at us one after the other, and said, what?
I would have enjoyed myself immensely if a sense of heavy uneasiness had not continued to weigh on me.
What troubled me was the uncertainty of not knowing whether we really had escaped our pursuers.
There was the horrible possibility that they had seen us enter the house and were waiting to grab us as we came out.
If they were there and I was caught with the diamonds in my possession, it would be a pretty dark outlook for Laura the lady.
So dark I could not bear to picture it, even in thought.
As I talked and laughed with my hosts, my mind was turning over every possible means by which I could get rid.
of the stones before I left the house, trying to think up some way in which I could dispose of them,
and yet which would not place them quite beyond reclaiming. I think my nerves had been shaken
by that spectral pursuit in the fog. Anyway, I wasn't willing to risk a second edition of it.
We sat over dinner a little more than an hour. It was not yet ten when Mrs. Kennedy and I rose,
and with a reminder to Tom that we were to go to the opera,
I trailed off in advance of my hostess across the hall into the drawing room.
Here we sat down by a little gilt table
and disposed ourselves to endure that dreary period
when women have to put up with one another society for ten minutes.
It was my opportunity of getting rid of the diamonds, and I knew it.
We had sipped our coffee for a few minutes,
and dodged about with the usual commonplaces, when I suddenly grew grave and leaning toward
Mrs. Kennedy said, Now that we are alone, my dear Mrs. Kennedy, I must ask you about a matter
of which I am particularly anxious to hear more. She looked at me with furt of alarm. I could see she was
nerving herself for a grapple with the unknown. What matter? She said. I lowered my
voice to the key of confidences that are dire, if not actually tragic.
How about poor Amelia? I murmured. She dropped her eyes to her cup, frowning a little.
I was thrilling with excitement, waiting to hear what she was going to say. After a moment she
lifted her face, perfectly calm and grave, to mine and said, really, the subject is a very
painful one to me. I'd rather not talk about it. It was a master stroke. I could not have done better
myself. I eyed her with open admiration. You never would have thought it of her. She seemed so young.
After she had spoken, she gave a sigh and again looked down at her cup with an expression on her face
of pensive musing. At that moment, the voices of the men leaving the dining room,
struck on my ear. I put my hand into the front of my dress and undid the safety pin.
My manner became furtive and hurried. Mrs. Kennedy, I said, leaning across the table and speaking
almost in a whisper, I entirely sympathize with your feelings, but I am very much worried about
Amelia. You know the—the circumstances. She raised her eyes, looked into mine, and nodded
darkly. Will I have something here for her? It's nothing much, I said in answer to a look of protest I saw
rising in her face. Just the merest trifle I would like you to give her, she will understand.
I drew out the bag and I saw her looking at it with curious, uneasy eyes. The men were approaching
through the back drawing room. I rose to my feet and still with the secret hurried air, I said,
Don't give yourself any trouble about it. It's just for me to her. Our husbands, of course,
mustn't know. I'll put it here. Poor Amelia. There was a crystal and silver bowl on the table,
and I put the bag into it and placed a book over it. Mrs. Thatcher, she said quickly. Really, I...
Hush! I said dramatically. It's for Amelia. We understand.
and then the men entered the room.
We left a few minutes later.
The butler called a cab for us,
and even if a person had never been a thief,
he ought to have had some idea of how we felt
as we issued out of that house
and walked down the steps.
We neither of us spoke till we got inside the Hansom
and drove off,
safe for that time anyway.
We went to Handsome Harry's place for that night
and sent him back for Maude
with the message she must get out immediately with what things she could bring.
By eleven she was with us, with her trunk and mine on top of a four-wheeler.
The next morning we had scattered.
I for Calais en route to Paris, Tom for Edinburgh.
Maude went on to join a vaudeville company that she acts with between wiles.
We had to leave a good many things in the flat, but I felt we'd got out cheaply.
and had no regrets. That is the history of my connection with the Castlecourt diamond robbery.
Of course it was not the end of the connection of our gang with the case, but my actual participation
ended here. I was simply an interested spectator from this on. My statement is merely the record
of my own personal share in the theft, and as such is written with as much clearness and
fullness as I, who am unused to the pen, have got at my command.
End of Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 of the Castle Court Diamond Mystery.
This is a Librevox recording.
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Read by Brent Nasworthy.
The Castle Court Diamond Mystery.
by Geraldine Bonner.
Statement of Cassius P. Kennedy, formerly of Necropolis City, Ohio, now manager of the London
branch of the Colonial Box Tub and Courage Company Limited of Chicago and St. Louis.
We'd been in London two years when a series of extraordinary events took place, which involved
us through no fault of our own, in the most unpleasant predicament that ever overtook
two honest, respectable Americans in a foreign country.
I'd been sent over to start the English branch of the Colonial Box, Tub, and Courage Company.
One of the biggest concerns of the Middle West, and it wasn't two months before I realized that
the venture was going to catch on, and I was going to be at the head of a booming business.
I'd brought my wife and little girl along with me.
We'd been married five years, met in Necropolis City, and lived there and afterward in Chicago,
where I got my first big promotion.
She was Daisy Kay Fairweather of Buncomville, Indiana, and had been the best of Bucampville, Indiana, and had been the
bell of the place. She'd also attracted considerable attention in St. Louis and Kansas City where
we'd visited around a good deal. There was nothing green about Daisy Kay Fairweather. Never had been.
Daisy and I didn't know many people when we first came over, but that little woman wasn't here
six months before she'd sized up the situation and made up her mind just how and where she was
going to butt in. The first thing she did was to conform to those peculiar ones among the local
customs that seemed to her the most high tone. In Chicago, we'd always dined at half-past six,
and given the hired girls every Thursday off. In London, we'd dine the first year at half-past seven,
and the second at half-past eight. We had four servants and a butler called Perkins, who ran everything
in sight, myself included. I always dressed for dinner after Perkins came, and tried to look as if
it was my lifelong custom. I'd have sunk out of sight in a sea of shame rather than have
Perkins think I had not been brought up to it.
Daisy caught on to everything and then passed the word on to me.
She was always springing innovations on me, and I did the best I could to keep my end up.
She stopped talking the way she used to in Necropolis City and made Elaine, that's our little girl,
quit calling me Popper and call me Daddy.
She called her front hair, her fringe, and her shirt waist, her blues.
And she made me careful of what I said before the servants.
servants talk so, she'd say, just as if she'd heard them.
In Necropolis City, or even Chicago, we never bothered with the help talking.
They said what they wanted, and we said what we wanted, that's all there was to it.
But I supposed it was all right.
Whatever Daisy Kay Fairweather Kennedy says goes with me.
By the second season, Daisy'd broken quite away into society and knew a bishop and two lords.
We were asked out a good deal, and we'd some worthy little dinners.
at our own shack, 15 Farley Street, near Walworth Crescent, a 35-foot, four-story, high-stooped edifice,
that we paid the same rent for you'd pay a seven-room flat in Chicago.
Daisy by this time was in with all kinds of push. She was what she called a success.
Nights when we didn't go out, she'd sit in with me and say, well, I don't really see how I'll
ever be able to live in Chicago again, and Necropolis City would certainly kill me.
This same season, Lady Sarah Jives, dined with us twice.
It was a great step, Daisy said, and I took it for granted she knew.
And once at a reception, Daisy stood right up close to the Marchioness of Castlecourt,
the greatest beauty in London, and watched her drink a cup of tea.
Daisy didn't meet her that time, but she said to me,
Next season I'll know her.
And the season after that, if we're careful, I'll dine with her.
Then Cassius P. Kennedy, we will have arrived.
I said, sure. That's what I mostly say to her, because she's mostly right. You don't often find
that little woman making breaks. It was in our third season in London, the time in the middle of May,
when the things occurred of which I have made mention at the beginning of my statement.
It was this way. We'd been going out a good deal pretty nearly every night, and we were glad to
have, for once, a quiet evening at home. Of course, that doesn't mean the same as it does in
Necropolis City or even Chicago. We dine just the same at half-past eight, and both of us dress for
dinner. We have to, Daisy says, no matter how we feel because of the servants. The servants in London
are good servants all right, but the way you have to avoid shocking their sensitive feelings
sometimes makes a freeborn American rebellious. I like to think I'm an object of interest to my fellow
creatures, but it's a good deal of bother to have it on your mind that you mustn't destroy the
illusions of the butler are upset the ideals of the cook.
As we were waiting for dinner to be announced, we heard a cab rattle up and stop as it seemed
at our front door. We looked at each other with inquiring eyes, and then heard the cab go off,
on the full jump, I should say, by the noise it made. And a minute later, the bell rang sharp and
quick. Perkins opened the door, and Daisy and I heard a lady's voice, very sweet and sort of
drawling. Say something in the vestibule. I peeped through the curtains, and there were a man and a woman,
a distinguished-looking pair, taking off their coats and primping themselves at the hall mirror.
I'd never seen either of them before, as far as I could remember. But I could tell by their general
makeup that they were the real thing. The kind Daisy was always cultivating and asking to dinner.
I stepped back and said to her in a whisper,
"'Somebody's come to dinner, and you've forgotten all about it.' She shook her head and whispered back.
I haven't asked anyone to dinner. I'm sure I haven't.
Well, they're here. Whether we've asked them or not, I hissed.
And you can't turn them out, they expect to be fed.
Who are they? Search me, friends of yours I've never seen.
Oh, for pity's sake, don't look surprised. Try and pretend it's all right.
We lined up by the fireplace and got our smiles already.
The portier was drawn and Perkins announced,
Major and Mrs. Thatcher.
They sailed smilingly into the room, the woman
and a head rustling in a long, sparkly black dress. To my certain knowledge, I'd never seen
either of them before. The woman was very pretty, not pretty in the sense that Daisy is,
with beautiful features and a perfect complexion, but slim and pale and aristocratic looking.
She had black hair with a little wreath of red flowers in it and the whitest neck I ever saw.
She evidently thought she was all right as far as herself and the house and the dinner were
concerned, for she was perfectly serene, and easy as an old shoe.
The man behind her was a big, handsome, dense chap, just home from India, they said, and he looked it.
He'd that dull way those dead swell army fellows sometimes have.
It goes with a long mustache and an eyeglass.
I looked out of the tail of my eye at Daisy, and I knew by her face she couldn't remember either of them.
But they were the genuine article, and she wasn't going to be fazed by any situation that could boil up out of the society pool.
She was just as easy as they were.
She'd a smile in her face like a child.
And she said the little mild, milky things, women say, just as milkily and mildly as
though she was greeting her lifelong friends.
While it went along as smoothly as a summer tea, they located themselves as Major and Mrs. Thatcher,
and told a lot about their life and their movements, all of which I could see Daisy greedily
gathering in.
I didn't know whether she remembered them or not, but I didn't think she did.
She was so careful about alluding to places where she'd met them.
They seemed to know her all right, Mrs. Thatcher especially.
She'd allude to smart houses where Daisy had been asked and tony people that were getting to be friends of Daisies.
She seemed to be right in the best circles herself.
I wouldn't like to say how many times she mentioned the names of Earls and Lords.
One of them, barren, some name like fiddlesticks, she said was her cousin.
She didn't stay long after dinner.
I don't think I sat ten minutes with the Major, and it was a dull ten minutes and make no mistake.
There was nothing light and airy about him.
He asked me about Chicago, which he pronounced Chicago,
and said he had heard there was a good sport in the Rocky Mountains,
and thought of going there to hunt the Great Oak.
I didn't know what the Great Oak was when I asked him.
He looked blankly at me, and said he believed a large form of bird,
which surprised me as I had an idea it was a pre-adimate beast like a behemoth.
I was glad to have the Major go,
not only because he was so dull,
but because I was so dying to find out from Daisy if she'd placed them and who they were.
They were hardly on the steps and the front door shut on them before I was back in the parlor.
Who are they, for heaven's sake? I burst out. She shook her head, laughing a little, looking utterly
bewildered. My dear boy, she said, I haven't the least idea. It's the most extraordinary thing I ever
knew. Isn't there anything about them you remember? Didn't they say something that gave you a clue?
Not a word. And yet they seemed to know me so well. The queerest thing of all was that when you were
in the dining room with the man, the woman in the most country.
confidential tone began to ask me about someone called Amelia. It was too dreadful. I hadn't the
faintest notion what she meant. What did you say? I'll lay ten to one you were equal to it.
I realized it was desperate, and after going to the dinner so credibly, I wasn't going to break down
over the coffee. She said, how about poor Amelia? I knew that by poor and by the expression of her
face, it was something unusual and queer. I thought a minute, and then looked as solemn as I could,
and answered. Really, the subject is a very painful one to me. I'd rather not talk about it.
We both roared. It was so like Daisy to be ready that way. And then, this is the strangest part of all.
She put her hand in the front of her dress and drew out some little thing of shammie leather
and told me to give it to Amelia from her. I tried to stop her, but it was too late. She put it here
in the crystal bowl. Daisy went to the bowl and took out a little limp sack of chammy leather.
"'It feels like pebbles,' she said, pinching it.
"'And then she opened it and shook the pebbles into her hand.
"'I bent down to look at them, my head close to hers.
"'The palm of her hand was covered with small, sparkling crystals of different sizes and very bright.
"'We looked at them, and then at one another.
"'They were diamonds!'
"'For a moment we did neither of us say anything.
"'Daisy had been laughing, and her laugh died away into a sort of scared giggle.
"'Her hand began to shake a little,
and it made the diamonds send out gleams in all directions.
What?
What does it mean, she said, in a low sort of gasp?
I just looked at them and shook my head,
but I felt a cold sinking in that part of my organism
where my courage is usually screwed to the sticking place.
Are they real, do you think?
She said again,
and took the evening paper and poured them out on it.
Spread out that way, they looked most awfully numerous and rich.
There must have been more than a hundred of them,
of different sizes, and shaking around on the surface of the paper made them shine and sparkle like
stars.
It's a fortune, Cassius, she said, almost in a whisper.
It's a fortune in diamonds.
Why did she leave them?
Didn't she say they were for Amelia?
I said in a hollow tone.
Yes, but who is Amelia?
How will we ever find her?
What shall we do?
It's too awful.
We stood opposite one another with the paper between us and tried to think.
In the lamplight, the diamonds winked at us with what seemed human malice.
I turned round and picked up the bag they had come from, looked vaguely into it, and shook it.
A last stone fell out on the paper, quite a large one, and added itself to the pile.
Why did she leave them here, Daisy moaned.
What did she bother us for?
Why didn't she take them to Amelia herself?
Because she was afraid, I said, in the undertone of melodrama.
They're stolen, Daisy.
I had voiced the fear in both our hearts.
We sat down opposite one another on either side of the table
with the newspaperful of diamonds between us.
I don't know whether I was as pale as Daisy,
but I felt quite as bad as she looked.
And sitting thus, each staring into the other's scared face,
we ran over the events of the evening.
We couldn't make much of it.
It was too uncanny.
But from the first we both decided we'd felt something to be wrong.
Why or how they'd come, who they were,
what they wanted. We couldn't answer a single question. We were in a maze. The only thing that
seemed certain was that they had 150 diamonds in varying sizes that they had wanted, for some reason,
to get rid of. And they'd got rid of them to us. And so we talked and talked till, by slow degrees,
we got to the point where suddenly, with a simultaneous start, we looked at one another and breathed
out, the castle court diamonds. We had read it in all the papers, and we had talked it over. And here
we were with a pile of gems and a newspaper that might be the very stones.
And next year I'd hope to know Lady Castlecourt. I'd been sure I would, Daisy wailed.
And now...
But you haven't stolen the diamonds, dearest, I said soothingly. You needn't get in a fever about
that. But good heavens, I might just as well. Do you suppose there's anyone in the world
fool enough to believe the story of what happened here tonight? People say it's hard to
believe everything in the Bible, why Jonah and the whale is a simple everyday affair compared to
it. It did look bad. The more we talked of it, the worse it looked. We didn't sleep all night,
and when the dawn was coming through the blinds, we were still talking, trying to decide what to do.
At breakfast we sat like two graven images, not eating a thing. And all that day in the office,
I found it impossible to concentrate my mind, but sat thinking of what on earth we'd do with those
darn diamonds. I'd suggested the first thing to go and give them up at the nearest police station,
but Daisy wouldn't hear of that. She said that no one.
would believe a word of our story. It was too impossible. And when I came to think of it, I must say
I agreed with her. I saw myself telling that story in a court of justice and realized that a look of
conscious guilt would be painted on my face the whole time. I'd have felt, whether it was true or not,
that nobody really ought to believe it. And as an honest, self-respecting citizen, I ought not to
expect them to. Here we were, strangers that nobody knew a thing about anyway. Daisy said they'd take
us for accomplices. And when I said to her, we'd be a pretty rank pair of a
accomplices to give up the swag without a struggle, she said they think we got scared and decided to do
what she calls turn states evidence. She thought the best thing to do was to keep the stones, till we could
think up a more plausible story. We tried to do that. And the night after our meeting with Major and
Mrs. Thatcher, we stayed awake till three, thinking up plausible stories. We got a great collection of
them, but it seemed impossible to get a good one without implicating somebody. I invented a corker,
but it cast a dark suspicion on Daisy.
And she had an even better one,
but it would have undoubtedly resulted in the arrest of Perkins and the housemaid,
and possibly myself.
It was a horrible situation.
Even if we could possibly have escaped suspicion ourselves,
it would have ruined us socially and financially.
Would the colonial box tub and cordage company have retained
as the head of its London branch,
a man who had got himself mixed up with a sensational diamond robbery?
Not on your life.
That concern demands a high standard,
an unspotted record in all its employees.
I'd have got the sack at the end of the month.
And Daisy!
How would the bishop and two lords have felt about it?
Had no more use for that little woman, you can bet your bottom dollar.
Even Lady Sarah Jives, who, they say, will go anywhere to get a dinner,
would have given her the ice house laugh.
I know them.
And I saw my Daisy sitting at home all alone on her reception day,
and taking dinner with me every night.
No, sir.
That wouldn't happen if Cash S. P. Kennedy had to take those diamonds.
to the Thames and throw them off London Bridge in a weighted bag.
So there we were. It was a dreadful predicament.
Every morning we read the papers with our hearts thumping like hammers.
Every ring at the bell made us jump.
And we had a deadly fear that each time the portier was lifted
and a collar appeared we'd see the buttons and helmet of a policeman
with a warrant of arrest concealed upon his person.
I began to have awful dreams, and Daisy didn't sleep at all,
and got pale and peeked.
We thought up more plausible stories.
but they seemed to get less probable every time.
In all our spare moments together,
which used to be so happy and carefree,
we're now dark and harassed as the meetings of conspirators.
Even concealing the miserable things was a wearing anxiety.
First, we decided to divide them.
Daisy, to wear her half and the shammie bag hung around her neck,
while I concealed mine and a money belt worn under my clothes.
We had about decided on that, and I'd bought the belt.
when we got the idea that if we were killed in an accident, they'd be found on us,
and then our memoirs would go down to posterity blackened with shame.
So we just put them back in the bag and lock them up in Daisy's jewel case,
round which we hovered, as they say a murderer does, round the hiding place of his victim.
I never knew before how burglars felt, but if it was anything like the way Daisy and I did,
I wonder anybody ever takes to that perilous trade.
We were the most unhappy creatures in London, feeling ourselves a pair of thieves,
and our unpolluted, innocent home no better than a fence.
There was less in the papers about the Castle Court Diamond's robbery,
but that did not give us any peace.
For, in the first place, we didn't know for certain that we had the Castle Court diamonds,
and in the second, when we now and then did see dark allusions to the sleuths
being on a new and more promising scent,
we modestly supposed that we might be the quarry to which it led.
Daisy began to talk of going to prison as a termination of her career
that might not be so far distant, and to the thought of which she was growing reconciled.
This about covers the ground of my immediate connection with the stolen diamonds.
Their subsequent disposition is a matter of which my wife is more concerned than I am.
She also will be able to tell her part of the story, with more literary frills than I can muster up.
I'm no writing, man, and all I've tried to do is state my part of the affair, honestly and clearly.
End of Chapter 3
Chapter 4 of the Castle Court Diamond Mystery
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Read by Mike Manilakis
The Castle Court Diamond Mystery by Geraldine Bonner
Statement of John Burns Gillesie
Private Detective
Especially Engaged on the Castle Court Diamond case
At a quarter before 8 on the evening of May 4th, a telephone message was sent to Scotland
yard that a diamond necklace, the property of the Marquis of Castle Court, had been stolen
from Burrage's hotel. Bryson, one of the best of their men, was detailed upon the case,
and three days later my services were engaged by the Marquis. After investigations, which have
occupied several weeks, I have become convinced that the case is an unusual and complicated one.
The reasons which have led me to this conclusion, I will now set down as briefly and clearly as possible.
As has already been stated in the papers, the diamonds on the afternoon of the robbery,
were standing in a leather jewel case on the bureau in Lady Castlecourt's apartment.
To this room, access was obtained by three doors, that which led into Lord Castlecourt's room,
that which led into the sitting room, and that which led into the hall.
Lord Castlecourt's valet, James Cholmers, and Lady Castlecourt's maid, Sophie Jeffers,
had been occupied in this suite of apartments throughout the afternoon. At six, Jeffers had laid out her
ladyship's clothes, taken the diamonds from the metal dispatch box in which they were usually carried,
and set them on the bureau. She had then withdrawn into the sitting room with Chalmers,
where they had remained for half an hour talking. During this period of time,
Jeffers deposes that she heard the rustle of a skirt in the sitting room and went to the door to see if anyone had entered. No one was to be seen. She returned to the sitting room and resumed her conversation with Chalmers. It is the general supposition, and it would appear to be the reasonable one, that the diamonds were then taken. According to Jeffers, they were in the case at six o'clock, and on the testimony of Lord and Lady Castle Court, they were gone at half-past seven.
The person toward whom suspicion points is a housemaid, going by the name of Saraj White,
who had a pass key to the apartment. The suspicions of Saragued White were strengthened by her
actions. At quarter past seven that evening, she left the hotel without giving warning,
and carrying no further baggage than a small portmanteau. Upon examination of her room,
it was discovered that she had left a gown hanging on the pegs, and her box, which contained a few
articles of coarse underclothing and a wadded cotton quilt. She had been uncommunicated with the
other servants, but had had much conversation with Sophie Jeffers, who described her as a brisk,
civil-spoken girl whose manner of speech was above her station. The natural suspicions evoked
by her behavior were intensified in the mind of Bryson by the information that the celebrated crook
Laura the Lady had returned to London. I myself had seen the woman at Earl's Court,
and told Bryson's of the occurrence. It had appeared to Bryson that Jeffers' description of the
housemaid had many points of resemblance with Laura the Lady. The theft reminded us both of the
affair of the Comtesse de Chateau-Gais's rubies, when this particular thief, who speaks French,
as well as she does English, was supposed to have been the moving spirit in one of the most daring
jewel robberies of our time. Bryson, confident that Sarah Dwight and Laura the Lady were one and
the same, concentrated his powers in an effort to find her.
He was successful to the extent of locating a woman closely resembling Laura the lady,
living quietly in a furnished flat in Knight's Bridge with a man who passed as her husband.
He discovered that this couple had left for a business trip on the continent
shortly before Sarah Dwight's appearance at Burridge's,
and had returned shortly after her departure therefrom.
He regarded the pair and their movements as of sufficient importance to be watched,
and for a week after their return from the continent had the flat shadowed.
one foggy night while he himself was watching the place the man and woman came out in evening dress and took a handsome that was waiting for them brison followed them and the fog being dense and their horse fresh lost them in the maze of streets about walworth crescent
he is positive that the occupants of the cab realized they were followed and attempted to escape he assures me that he saw the driver turn several times and look at his handsome and then lash his horse to a desperate speed
one of the points in this nocturnal pursuit that he thinks most noteworthy is the manner in which the occupants of the cab disappeared after keeping it well in sight for over half an hour he lost it completely and suddenly in the short street that runs from walworth crescent north into farley street
ten minutes later he is under the impression that he cited it again near the hyde park hotel but if it was the same cab it was empty and the driver was looking for fares for some
Some hours after this, Bryson patrolled the streets in the neighborhood, but could find no trace of the
suspected pair. It was midnight when he returned to his surveillance of the flat. The next morning he
heard that its occupants had left. A search warrant revealed the fact that they had gone with such
haste that they had left many articles of dress, et cetera, behind them. There was every evidence of a
hurried flight. All this was so much clear proof in Bryson's opinion of the guilt of Saraj White.
upon this hypothesis he is working, and I have not disturbed his confidence in the integrity of his efforts.
The results of my investigations, which I have been quietly and systematically pursuing for the last three weeks,
has led me to a different and much more sensational conclusion.
That Sarah Dwight may have taken the diamonds, I do not deny,
but she was merely an accomplice in the hands of another.
The real thief, in my opinion, is Gladys, Martianess of Castlecourt.
My reasons for holding this theory are based upon observations taken at the time, upon my large and varied experience in such cases, and upon information that I have been collecting since the occurrence.
Let me briefly state the result of my deductions and researches.
Lady Castlecourt, who was the daughter of a penniless Irish clergyman, was a young girl of great beauty brought up in the direst poverty.
Her marriage with the Marquis of Castlecourt, which took place several years ago the spring,
lifted her into a position of social prominence and financial ease.
Society made much of her. She became one of its most brilliant ornaments.
Her husband's infatuation was well known.
During the first years of their marriage, he could refuse her nothing, and he stinted himself,
for, though well off, Lord Castlecourt is by no means a millionaire peer in order to satisfy her whims.
The lady very quickly developed great extravagances. She became known as one of the most
expensively dressed women in London. It had been mentioned in certain society journals that
Lord Castlecourt's revenues had been so reduced by his wife's extravagance that he had
been forced to rent his townhouse in Groves and Gate, and for two seasons, take rooms in Burgess
Hotel. This is a simple statement of certain tendencies of the lady. Now let me state with more
detail how these tendencies developed and to what they led.
I will admit here, before I go further, that my suspicions of Lady Castlecourt were aroused
from the first. It was, perhaps, with a predisposed mind that I began those explorations into her
life during the past five years, which have convinced me that she was the moving spirit in
the theft of the diamonds. For the first two years of her married life, Lady Castlecourt
lived most of the time on the estate of Castlecourt Marsh Manor. During this period, she became the
mother of two sons, and it was after the birth of the second that she went to London and spent her
first season there since her marriage. She was in blooming health, and even more beautiful than she had
been in her girlhood. She became the fashion. No gathering was complete without her. Her costumes were
described in the papers. Royalty admired her. I have discovered that at this time her husband
gave her 600 pounds per annum for a dressing allowance. During the first two years of their married life,
she lived within this. But after that, she exceeded it to the extent of hundreds, and finally
thousands of pounds. The fifth year after her marriage, she was in debt three thousand pounds,
her creditors being dressmakers, furriers, jewelers, and milliners in London and Paris. She made no
attempt to pay these debts, and the tradesmen, knowing her high social position,
and her husband's rigid sense of pecuniary obligations did not press her, and she went on spending
with an unstinted hand. It was last year that she finally precipitated the catastrophe by the purchase
of a coat of Russian sable for the sum of one thousand pounds, and a set of turquoise ornaments
valued at half that amount. Each of these purchases was made in Paris. The two creditors,
having been already warned of her disinclination to meet her bills, had, it is said, laid wagers
with other firms to which she was deeply in debt, that they would extract the money from her
within the year. It was in the summer of the past year that Lady Castlecourt was first
threatened by Bolkonsky, the furrier, with law proceedings. In the end of September, she went to
Paris and visited the man in his own offices, and, I have it from an eyewitness, exhibited the
greatest trepidation and alarm, finally begging, with tears, for an extension of a month's time.
To this, Bolkonsky consented, warning her that, at the end of that time, if his account was not
settled, he would acquaint his lordship with the situation and institute legal proceedings.
Before the month was up, that was in October of the past year, his account was paid in full by Lady
Castlecourt herself. At the same time, other accounts in Paris and London were entirely settled or
compromised. I find that during the months of October and November, Lady Castlecourt paid off
debts amounting to nearly £4,000. In most instances, she settled them personally, paying them in bank
notes. A few claims were paid by check. I have it from those with whom she transacted these
monetary dealings, that she seemed greatly relieved to be able to discharge her obligations, and that in
cases she requested silence on the subject as the price of her future patronage.
I now come to a feature of the case that I admit greatly puzzles me. Lady Castlecourt was still
wearing the diamonds when this large sum was dispersed by her. As far as can be ascertained,
she had made no effort to sell them, and I can find no trace of a frustrated attempt to steal
them. She had suddenly become possessed of four thousand pounds without the aid of the diamonds.
They were not called into requisition till nearly six months later.
The natural supposition would be that someone, an unknown donor, had put up the four thousand pounds.
In fact, Lady Castle Court had a lover to whom, in a desperate extremity, she had appealed.
But the most thorough examination of her past life reveals no hint of such a thing.
Frivolous and extravagant, as she undoubtedly was,
she seems to have been, as far as her personal conduct goes, a moral and virtuous lady.
Her name had been associated with no man's, either in a foolish flirtation or a scandalous and
compromising intrigue. In fact, her devotion to Lord Castlecourt appears to have been of an
absolutely genuine and sincere kind. While she did not scruple to deceive him as to her pecuniary
dealings, she unquestionably seems to have been perfectly upright and honest in the matter of
marital fidelity. Where then did Lady Castlecourt secure this large sum of money?
My reading of the situation is briefly this. Her creditors becoming rebellious, and Lady
Castlecourt becoming terrified, she appealed to some woman friend for a loan.
Who this is, I have no idea, but among her large circle of acquaintances, there are several
ladies of sufficient means, and sufficiently intimate with Lady Castlecourt, to have been able to
advance the required sum. This was done, as I have shown above, in the month of October,
when Lady Castlecourt was in Paris, where she at once began to pay off her debts.
After this, she continued wearing the diamonds, and, in my opinion, such as her shallowness
and irresponsibility of character, forgot the obligations of the loan, which had probably been made
under a promise of speedy repayment, either in full or in part. It was then, this let it be understood
it is all surmise, that Lady Castlecourt's new and unknown debtor began to press for a repayment.
There might be many reasons why this should so closely have followed the loan.
With a woman of Lady Castlecourt's lax and unbusiness-like methods,
unusual conditions could be readily exacted.
She is of the class of persons that, under a pressing need for money,
would agree to any conditions and immediately forget them.
That she did agree to a speedy reimbursement, I am positive.
that once again she found herself confronted by an angry and threatening creditor,
and that in desperation and with the assistance of Sarah's White, she stole the diamonds,
intending probably to pawn them, is the conclusion to which my experience and investigations
have led me. How she came to select Sarah's White as an accomplice I am not qualified
the state. In my opinion, fear of detection made her seek the aid of a Confederate.
Sarah's flight, with its obviously suspicious surroundings, has an air of pre-arrangement,
suggestive of having been carefully planned to divert suspicion from the real criminal.
Sophie Jeffers assured me that Lady Castlecourt had never, to her knowledge,
conversed at any length with the housemaid.
But Jeffers is a very simple-minded person, whom it would be an easy matter to deceive.
That Sarah's White was her ladyship's accomplice, I am positive,
that she took the jewels and now has them is also my opinion. Being convinced of her need of ready money
and of the rashness and lack of balance in her character, I have been expecting that Lady Castlecourt
would make some decisive move in the way of selling the diamonds. With this idea, agents of mine have been
on the watch, but without so far finding any evidence that she has attempted to place the stones on the market.
We have found no traces of them, either in London or Paris, or the usual depot.
in Holland or Belgium. It is true that the Castlecourt diamonds, not being remarkable for size,
would be easy to dispose of in small, separate lots. But our system of surveillance is so thorough
that I do not see how they could escape us. I am of the opinion that the stones are still in the
hands of Sarah Dwight, who, whether she is an accomplished thief or not, is probably more wary
and more versed in such dealings than Lady Kesselcourt. That her ladyship should have been the object
of my suspicions from the start may seem peculiar to those to whom she appears only as a person of rank,
wealth, and beauty. Before the case came under my notice at all, I had heard her uncontrolled
extravagance remarked upon, and that alone, coupled with the fact that Lord Castlecourt is not
a peer of vast wealth, and that the lady's moral character is said to be unblemished, would naturally
arouse the suspicion of one used to the vagaries and intricacies of the evolution of crime.
my first interview with her ladyship, I watched her closely, and was struck by her pallor,
her impatience under questioning, her hardly concealed nervousness, and her indignant repudiation
of the suspicions cast upon her servants. All the domestics in her employment agree that she
is a kind and generous mistress, and it would be particularly galling to one of her
disposition to think that her employees were suffering for her faults. Her answers to many of my
questions were vague and evasive. And to both Bryson and myself at two different times,
she suggested the possibility of the jewels not being stolen at all, but having been mislaid.
Even Bryson, whose judgment had been warped by her beauty and rank, was forced to admit the
strangeness of this remark. The description given me by Sophie Jeffers over Ladyship's
deportment when the theft was discovered still further strengthened my suspicions. Lady
Castlecourt's behavior at this juncture might have passed as natural by those not used to the very
genuine hysteria which often attacks criminals. That she was wrought up to a high degree of nervous
excitement is acknowledged by all who saw her. It is alleged by Jeffers, quite innocently of any intention
to injure her mistress, to whom she appears devoted, that her ladyship's first emotion on discovering
the loss was a fear of her husband, that when he entered the room she instinctively tried to conceal the
empty jewel case behind her, and that almost her first words to him were assurances that she had not
been careless, but had guarded the jewels well. Fear of Lord Castlecourt was undoubtedly the most
prominent feeling she then possessed, and it showed itself with unrestrained frankness in the
various ways described above. Afterward, she attempted to be more reticent, and adopted an air of what
almost appeared indifference, surprising not only myself and Bryson, but Jeffers, by her remarks,
made with irritated impatience that they still might turn up somewhere, and that she did not
see how we could be so sure they were stolen. This change of attitude was even more convincing
to me than her former exhibition of alarm. The very candor and childishness with which she
showed her varying states of mind would have disarmed most people, but were to me almost
conclusive proofs of her guilt. She is a woman whose shallow irresponsibility of mind is even more
unusual than her remarkable beauty. No one but an old and seasoned criminal, or a creature of
extraordinary simplicity, could have behaved with so much audacity in such a situation.
Having arrived at these conclusions, I am not reduced to a passive attitude. I will wait and watch
until such time as the diamonds are either pawned or sold. This may not occur for much,
once, though I am inclined to think that her ladyship's need of money will force her to a recklessness,
which will be her undoing. Sarah Dwight may be able to control her to a certain point,
but I am under the impression that her ladyship, frightened and desperate, will be a very difficult
person to handle. This brings my statement up to date. At the present writing, I am simply awaiting
developments, confident that the outcome will prove the verity of my original proposition,
and the exactitude of my subsequent line of argument.
End of chapter four.
Chapter 5 of the Castle Court Diamond Mystery.
This is a Libravox recording.
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Read by April Mendez.
The Castle Court Diamond Mystery by Geraldine Bonner.
The statement of Daisy K. Fairweather Kennedy, late of Necropolis City, Ohio, at present, a resident of 15 Farley Street, Knightsbridge, London.
I believe it is not necessary for me to state how a chamois-skin bag containing 162 diamonds came into my hands on the evening of May 14th.
That it did come into my possession was enough for me.
I never before thought that the possession of diamonds could make a woman so perfectly miserable.
When I was a young girl in Necropolis City, I used to think to own a diamond, even a small one,
would be just about the acme of human joy.
But Necropolis City is a good way behind me now, and I have found that the owning of a handful of them can be about the most wearing form.
of misery. I suppose there are fearless, upright people in the world who would have taken those
diamonds straight back to the police station and braved public opinion. It would have been better
to have your word doubted, to be tried for a thief, put in jail, and probably complicated the
diplomatic relations between England and the United States, then to conceal in your domicile
one hundred and sixty-two precious stones that didn't belong to you.
I hope everyone understands,
and I'm sure everyone does who knows me,
that I did not want to keep the miserable things.
What good did they do me anyway,
locked up in my jewel box in the upper right-hand bureaued roar?
We knew no peace from that tragic evening
when Major and Mrs. Thatcher dined with us,
First, we tried to think of ways of getting rid of them.
Of the diamonds, I mean.
Cassius, who's just a simple, uncomplicated man,
wanted to take them right to the nearest police station and hand them in.
I soon showed him the madness of that.
Was there a soul in London who would have believed our story?
Wouldn't the American ambassador himself have had to bow his crested head
and tame his heart of fire, and admit it was about the fisciest tale he had ever heard,
it would have ruined us forever.
Even if Cassius hadn't been deposed from his place as the head of the English branch
of the Colonial Box, Tub, and Courage Company Limited, of Chicago and St. Louis,
who would have known me?
The trail of the diamonds would have been over us forever.
lady sarah jives would have gone round saying she always thought i had the face of a thief and the bishop and the two lords i've collected with such care would have cut me dead in the park i would have received my social quietest forever and i just tell you when i've worked for a thing as hard as i have for that bishop and the two lords and lady sarah jives i'm not going to give them up without a struggle cassius and i spent two
feverish, agonized weeks, trying to think what we would do with the diamonds.
I never knew before I had so much inventive ability. It was wonderful the things we thought of.
One of our ideas was to put a personal in the papers advertising for Amelia.
We spent five consecutive evenings concocting different ones that would have had the effect
of rousing Amelia's curiosity and deadening that of everybody else.
It did not seem capable of construction.
Twist and turn it as you would.
You couldn't state that you had something valuable in your possession for Amelia
without making the paragraph bristle with a sort of mysterious importance.
It was like a trap set and baited to catch the attention of a detective.
We did insert one.
Will Amelia kindly publish her present address and oblige Major and Mrs. Thatcher?
which, after all, didn't involve us.
And for two weeks we read the papers with beating hopeful hearts.
But there was no reply.
I thought Amelia never saw it.
Cassius thought there was no such person.
A month dragged itself away,
and there we were with these horrible gems locked in my jewel box.
I began to look pale and miserable,
and Cassius told me he thought the diamonds were
becoming a fixed idea with me, and he'd have to take me away for a change.
Once I told him I felt as if I'd never have any peace or be my old gay self again while they
were in my possession. He said, that being the case, he'd take them out some night and throw them
in the serpentine, the pond where the despondent people commit suicide. But I dissuaded him from it.
"'Perhaps they'll never be claimed,' I said,
"'and some day when we're old we can have them set
"'and Elaine can wear them.'
"'You might even wear them yourself,' Cassius said,
"'trying to cheer me up.
"'What would be the good?' I answered gloomily.
"'I'd be at least sixty before I'd dare to.'
"'All through June I lived under this wearing strain
and I grew thinner and more nervous day by day.
The season, which is always so lovely and gay,
was no longer an exciting and joyous time for me.
I drove down Bond Street with a frowning face,
and it did not cheer me up at all to see how many people I seemed to know.
Looking down the vistas of quiet, asphalted streets,
where the lines of sedate house fronts are brightened by polished brasses
on the doors and flower boxes at the windows.
I was no longer filled with an exhilarating determination
to someday be an honored guest in every house that was worth entering.
When I drove by the green ovals of the little parks,
which you can't enter without a private key,
I experienced none of my old ambition to have a key to
and go in and mingle with the aristocracy sitting on wooden benches.
even meeting the Countess of Bellesboro at a reception, and being asked by her in a sociable friendly way,
if I knew her cousin John, who was mining somewhere in Mexico or Honduras, she wasn't sure which,
did not cheer me up at all. The change in me was extraordinary. When I first came to London,
if even a curate or a clerk from the city had asked me such a question, I'd have made an effort
to remember John, as if Mexico had been my front garden, and I'd played all round Honduras when I was a child.
Now I said to Lady Belsborough that neither Mexico nor Honduras were part of the United States,
quite snappishly as if I thought she was stupid, and all because of those accursed diamonds.
It was toward the end of June, and the days were getting warm when the climax came.
The pressure of the season was abating. The rhododendrons were dead in the park, and there was dust on the trees. In St. James's, the grass was quite worn in patchy, and strangely clad people lay on it, sleeping in the sun. One met a great many American tourists in white shirt-waists and long veils. I thought of the time when I, too, innocently and unthinkingly,
had worn a white shirt waist, and it didn't seem to me such a horrible time after all.
At least I did not then have 162 stolen diamonds in my jewelbox.
My heart was lighter in those days, even if my shirt waste had only cost a dollar and forty-nine cents
at a department store in Necropolis City.
The month ended with a spell of what the English call frightful heat.
It was quite warm weather, and we saw,
sat a good deal on the little balcony that juts out from my window over the front door.
Farley Street is quiet and rather out of line of general traffic, so we had chairs and a table there
and used to have tea served under the one palm, which was all there was room for.
We could not have visitors there, for it opened out of my bedroom. So our tea parties on the
balcony were strictly family affairs, just Cassius and Elaine and I.
The last day of the month was really very warm.
Every door in the house was open,
and the servants went about gasping with their faces crimson.
I dined at home alone that evening,
as one of the members of the box-tub and cordage company
was in London at the Carlton,
and Cassius was dining with him.
I did not expect him home till late,
as there would be lots to talk over.
I had not felt well all the first.
day. The heat had given me a headache, and after dinner I lay on the sofa in the sitting room,
feeling quite miserable. Only a few of the lamps were lit, and the house was dim and extremely quiet.
Being alone that way in the half-dark got on my nerves, and I decided I'd go upstairs and go to bed
early. I always did hate sitting about by myself, and now more than ever, with the diamonds on my
conscience. Our stairs are thickly carpeted, and as I had on thin satin slippers and a crape
tea gown, I made no noise at all coming up. I always have a light burning in my room, so when I saw
a yellow gleam below the door, I did not think anything of it, but just softly pushed the
door open and went in. Then I stopped dead where I stood. A man with a soft, with a soft,
felt hat on, and a
handkerchief tied over the lower part
of his face was standing in front
of the bureau. He had not heard me, and for
a moment I stood without making a sound,
watching him. The two gas
jets on either side of the bureau were
lit, and that part of the room was flooded with light.
Very quickly and softly,
he was turning over the contents of the drawers,
taking out laces, gloves,
and veils, throwing them this way and that out of his way, and opening every box he found.
My heart gave a great leap when I saw him seize upon the jewel box, and my mouth, unfortunately,
emitted some kind of a sound. I think it was a sort of gasp of relief, but I'm not sure.
Whatever it was, he heard. He gave a start as if he had been electrified, raised his head, raised his head,
and saw me. For just one second he stood staring, and then he said something of a profane
character, I think, and ran for the balcony. And I ran too. There was something in the way, a little
table, I believe, and he collided with it. That checked him for a moment, and I got to the window first.
I threw myself across it with my arms spread out, in an attitude like that assumed
by Sarah Bernhardt when she is barring her lover's exit in Fedora.
But I don't think any actress ever barred her lover's exit with as much determination and zeal
as I barred the exit of that burglar.
You can't go, I cried wildly.
You've forgotten something.
He paused just in front of me and I cried again.
You haven't got them.
They're in the jewelry box.
He moved forward and laid his...
his hand on my arm to push me aside. I felt quite desperate and wailed. Oh, don't go without
opening the jewelry box. There are some things in it I know you will like. He tried to push me out
of the way. Gently, it's true, but with force. But I clung to him, clasped him by the arm with what
must have appeared quite an affectionate grip and continued imploringly. Don't be in such a
a hurry. I'm sorry I interrupted you. If you'll promise not to go till you've looked through my
things and taken what you want, I'll leave the room. It was quite by accident that I came in.
The burglar let go my arm and looked at me over the handkerchief with a pair of eyes that seemed
quite kind and pleasant. Really? He said in a deep, gentlemanly voice that seemed familiar.
Really? I don't quite understand.
I know you don't, I interrupted impulsively.
How could you be expected to? And I can't explain.
It's a most complicated matter and would take too long.
Only don't be frightened and run away till you've taken something.
You've endangered your life and risked going to prison to get in here.
And wouldn't it be too foolish after that to go without anything?
Now, in the jewelry box, I indicated it and spoken what I hoped was a most insinuating tone.
There are some things that I think you'd like.
If you'd just look at them, you're a most persuasive lady, said the burglar, but...
He moved again toward the window.
A feeling of absolute anguish that he was going without the diamonds pierced me.
I threw myself in front of him again, and in some way, I can't tell you how, caught the handkerchief that covered his face and pulled it down.
There was the handsome visage and long mustache of Major Thatcher.
I backed away from him in the greatest confusion. He too blushed and looked uncomfortable.
Oh, Major Thatcher, I murmured. I beg your pardon. I'm so.
sorry, I don't know how it happened. I think the end of the handkerchief caught in my bracelet.
Pray don't mention it, answered the major. Nothing at all. Then we were both silent, standing opposite
one another not knowing what to say. It is not easy to faze me, but it must be admitted that the
situation was unusual. How is Mrs. Thatcher? I said desperately, when the silent
had become unbearable.
And the Major replied, in his deepest voice, and with his most abrupt military air.
Ethel's very fit.
Never was better in her life, thank you.
Mr. Kennedy is quite well, I hope.
Cassius is enjoying the best of health, I answered.
He's out tonight, I'm sorry to say.
Just fancy, said Major Thatcher.
Then there was a pause, and he added,
I could think of nothing more to say, and again we were silent.
It was really the most uncomfortable position I ever was in.
The major was a burglar beyond a doubt, but he looked and talked just like a gentleman.
Besides, he dined with us. That makes a great difference.
When a man has broken bread at your table as a respectable fellow creature, it's hard to
your mind round to regarding him severely as a criminal. I felt that the only thing to do was to
graciously ignore it all, as you do when someone spills the claret on your best tablecloth.
At the same time, there were the diamonds. I could not let the chance escape.
Oh, Major Thatcher, I said with an air of suddenly remembering something.
I don't know whether you know that your wife left a little package here that.
evening when you dined with us?
It was for Amelia?
Major Thatcher looked at me
with the most heavily solemn expression.
To be sure, he murmured,
for Amelia.
Well, I went on,
trying to impart to my words
a light society tone.
You know, we can't find her.
Very stupid of us, I have no doubt.
But we've tried, and we can't anywhere.
Major Thatcher stared.
blankly at the dressing table.
Strange, upon my word, he said.
So, Major Thatcher, if you don't mind, I'll give it back to you.
I think all things considered, it will be best for you to give it to Amelia yourself.
I went toward the dressing table.
You don't mind, do you?
I said, over my shoulder as I opened the jewelry box.
Not at all, not at all, answered the major.
anything to oblige a lady.
I drew out the sack of chamois skin.
Here it is, I said, holding it out to him.
You'll find it in perfect condition and quite complete.
I'm so sorry that we couldn't seem to locate Amelia.
Not knowing the rest of her name was rather inconvenient.
There were dozens of Amelia's in the directory.
The Major took the sack and put it in his breast pocket.
"'Dozens of Amelios,' he repeated, slapping his pocket.
"'Who'd have thought it?'
"'We even advertised,' I continued.
"'Perhaps you saw the personal.
It was in the morning herald, and was very short and non-committal, but no one answered it.'
"'We saw it,' said the Major.
"'Yes, I recollect quite distinctly seeing it.
"'It indicated to us.'
Oh, oh, the Major reddened and paused, pulling his mustache.
That we hadn't found Amelia and still had the present, I answered in a sprightly tone.
That was just it. And so you came to get it. Very kind of you indeed, Major Thatcher.
The Major bowed. He was really a very fine-looking, well-mannered man. If he only had been the honest, respectable person we first thought him,
I would have liked to add him to my collection.
I'm sure if you knew him better,
he would have been much more interesting than the bishop and the lords.
The kindness is on your side, he said.
And now, Mrs. Kennedy, I think, I think perhaps.
He looked at the window that gave on the balcony.
I think I'd better...
You must be going, I cried,
just as I say it to the bishop when he puts down his cup and looks at the clock.
How unfortunate!
But, of course, your other engagements.
I checked myself, suddenly realizing that it wasn't just the thing to say to the major.
When you're talking to a burglar, it doesn't seem delicate or thoughtful to allude to his other engagements.
That I made such a break as due to the fact that I've never talked to a burglar before
and was bound to be a little green.
The Major did not seem to mind.
Exactly so, he said.
My time is just now much occupied.
I, or I, he looked again at the window.
I entered that way, he said, but perhaps,
I don't think I'd go out that way if I were you, I answered hurriedly.
It would look so queer if anyone saw you.
Would the other and more usual exit be safe?
He asked.
His eye, as it met mine, was charged with a keener intelligence than I had seen in it before.
It would have to be, I answered with spirit.
What do you suppose the servants would think if they saw you coming out of here?
This, Major Thatcher, is my room.
Dear me, said the Major.
I suppose it is.
I never thought of that.
Wait here till I see if it's all right, I said, and then I'll come back and tell you.
I went into the hall and looked over the banister.
The gas was burning faintly, and a bar of pink lamplight fell out from the half-drawn portiers of the drawing room.
There was not a sound.
I knew the servants were all in the back part of the house, quite safe till eleven o'clock,
when, if we were home, they turned out the lights and locked.
up. I stole softly back into my room. The Major was standing in front of the mirror,
untying the handkerchief that hung round his neck. It's all right, I assured him in an
unconsciously lowered voice. You can go quite easily. I'll let you out, only you mustn't make
the least bit of noise. He thrust the handkerchief in his pocket and put on his hat,
pulling the brim down over his eyes. I must confess, he didn't. He didn't. He did, he'd
didn't look half so distinguished this way. When the handkerchief was gone, I saw he wore a flannel
shirt with a turned-down collar, and with his hat shading his face, he certainly did seem a strange
sort of man for me to be conducting down the stairs at half-past ten at night. If Perkins, who'd come to
us bristling with respectability from a distinguished evangelical aristocratic family, should meet
us, I would never hold up my head again.
Now, if you hear Perkins, I whispered, for heaven's sake, hide somewhere.
Run back to my room if you can't go anywhere else.
Perkins must not see you.
The Major growled out some reply, and we tiptoed breathlessly across the hall to the stairhead.
I was much more frightened than he was.
I know as I stole from step to step, my heart kept beating faster.
and faster. Such awful things might have happened. Perkins suddenly appeared to put out the lights.
Cassius come home early from the dinner and open the front door just as I was about to let the major out.
When we reached the door, I was quite faint, while the major seemed as cool as if he had been paying a call.
Very kind of you, I'm sure, he said, trying to take off his hat. I shan't forget it.
Oh, never mind being polite, I gasped.
You've got the diamonds. That's all that matters. Good night. Give my regards to Mrs. Thatcher. And he was gone. I shut the door and crept upstairs. First, I felt faint. And then I felt hysterical. When Cassius came home at 11, I was lying on the sofa in tears and all I could say to him was to sob. The diamonds are gone. The diamonds are gone.
He thought I'd gone mad at first, and then when I finally made him understand, he was nearly as excited as I.
He went downstairs and brought up a bottle of champagne, and we celebrated at midnight up in our room.
We had to tell lies to Perkins afterward to explain how we came to be one bottle short.
But what did lies matter, or even Perkins's opinion of us?
We were no longer crushed under the weight of 160.
two diamonds that didn't belong to us.
That is the history of my connection with the case.
From that night, I've never seen or heard of the stones,
nor have I seen Major or Mrs. Thatcher.
The diamonds entered our possession and departed from them,
exactly as I have told.
And though my statement may call for great credulity on the part of my readers,
all I can say is that I am willing to vouch for the truth
of every word of it.
End of chapter 5.
Chapter 6 of the Castle Court Diamond Mystery.
This is a Libravox recording.
All Libravox recordings are in the public domain.
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Read by Wendy Katzhiller.
The Castle Court Diamond Mystery
by Geraldine Bonner.
Statement of Gladys,
Martianess of Castlecourt.
I am sure if anyone was ever punished for their misdeeds, it was I. I suppose I ought to say sins,
but it is such an unpleasant word. I cannot imagine myself committing sins, and yet that is just
what I seem to have done. I couldn't have been more astonished if someone had told me I was going
to commit a murder. One thing I have learned, you do not know what you may do,
till you have been tried and tempted.
And then you do wrong before you realize it.
And all of a sudden it comes upon you
that you are a criminal quite unexpectedly,
and no one is more surprised than you.
I certainly know I was the most surprised person in London
when I realized that I...
But there, I'm wandering all about,
and I want to tell my story simply and shortly.
Everybody knows that when I married,
Lord Castlecourt, I was poor. What everybody does not know is that I was a natural spendthrift.
Extravagance was in my blood, as drinking or the love of cards is in the blood of some men.
I had never had any money at all. I used to wear the same gloves for years and always made my own
frocks, not badly either. I've made gowns that Lady Bundy said,
But that has nothing to do with it. I'm getting away from the point.
As I said before, I was poor. I didn't know how extravagant I was till I married, and Lord Castlecourt gave me six hundred pounds a year to dress on. It was a fortune to me. I had never thought one woman could have so much. The first two years of our married life, I did not run over it, because we lived most of the time in the country, and I had never thought one woman could have so much. The first two years of our married life, I did not run over it, because we lived most of the time in the country, and I had
was unused to it and spent it slowly and carefully. I was still unaccustomed to it when,
after my second boy was born, Herbert brought me to town for my first season since our marriage.
Then I began to spend money, quantities of it, for it seemed to me that six hundred pounds a year
was absolutely inexhaustible. When I saw anything pretty in a shop, I bought it, and I generally
forgot to ask the price, the shop people were always kind and agreeable, and seemed to have forgotten
about it as completely as I. After I had bought one thing, they would urge me to look at something else,
which was put away in a drawer or laid out in a cardboard box, and if I liked it, I bought that
too. If I ever paused to think that I was buying a great deal, I contented myself with the assurance that I had
six hundred pounds a year, which was so much I would never get to the end of it.
After that first season, a great many bills came in, and I was quite surprised to see I'd spent
already, with the year hardly half gone, more than my six hundred pounds. I could not understand
how it had happened, and I asked Herbert about it and showed him some of my bills. And for the first time in
our married life he was angry with me. He scolded me quite sharply and told me I must keep within my
allowance. I was hurt, and also rather muddled, with all these different accounts, most of which I could
not remember, and I made up my mind not to consult Herbert any more, as it only vexed him and made
him cross to me, and that I cannot bear. All the world must love me.
If there is a servant made in the house who does not like me, and I can feel it in a minute if she
doesn't, I must make her, or she must go away. But my husband, the best and finest man in the world,
to have him annoyed with me and scolding me over stupid bills, never again would that happen.
I showed him no more of them. In fact, I generally tore them up as they came in.
in, for fear I should leave them lying about and he would find them. If I could help it,
nothing in the world was ever going to come between Herbert and me. I also made good resolutions
to be more careful in my expenditures, and I really tried to keep them. I don't know how it
happened that they did not seem to get kept. But both in London and in Paris, I certainly did spend a great
deal. I'm sure I don't know how much. I did little accounts on the back of notes, and they were so
confusing, and I seemed to have spent so much more than I thought I had, that I gave up doing them.
After I'd covered the back of two or three notes with figures, I became so low-spirited I couldn't
enjoy anything for the rest of the day. I did not see that that did anybody any good,
So I ceased keeping the accounts.
And what was the use of keeping them?
If I had not the money to pay them with,
why should I make myself miserable by thinking about them?
I thought it much more sensible to try to forget them,
and most of the time I did.
It went on that way for two years.
When I got bills with things written across the bottom in red ink,
I paid part of them,
never all. I never paid all of anything. Once or twice tradesmen wrote me letters, saying they must have their
money, and then I went to see them, and told them how kind it was of them to trust me, and how I would pay them
everything soon, and they seemed quite pleased and satisfied. I always intended on doing it. I don't know where I thought
the money was coming from, but you never can tell what may happen.
friends of Herbert had a place near the Scotch border and found a coal mine in the forest.
Herbert has no lands near Scotland, but he has in other places, and he may find a coal mine too.
I merely cite this as an example of the strange ways things turn out.
I didn't exactly expect that Herbert would find a coal mine, but I did expect that money would
turn up in some unexpected way and help me out of my difficulties. The beginning of the series of
really terrible events of which I am writing was the purchase of a Russian sable jacket from a
furrier in Paris called Bolkonsky. It was in the early spring of last year. I had had no
dealings with Bolkonsky before. A friend told me of the jacket and took me there. It was a real
occasion. I knew the moment that I saw it, that it was one of those chances with which one rarely
meets. It fitted me like a charm, and I bought it for a thousand pounds. That miserable Balkansky
told me the payments might be made in any way I liked, and in Madame's own time. I also bought
some good turquoises that were going for nothing from a jeweller upstairs somewhere.
near the Rue de la Paix, who was selling out the jewels of an actress. It was these two people
who wrecked me. Not that they were my only debtors, I knew by this time that I owed a great deal.
When I thought about it, I was frightened, and so I tried not to think. But sometimes, when I was
awake at night and everything looked dark and depressed, I wondered what I would do if something
did not happen. In these moments I thought of telling my husband, and I buried my head in the pillow
and turned cold with misery. What would Herbert say when he found out his wife was thousands of pounds
in debt, the marquis of Castlecourt, who had never owed a penny and considered it a disgrace?
Perhaps he would be so horrified and disgusted he would send me away from him, back to I.
Ireland or to the continent. And what would happen to me then? That summer, we went to Castlecourt
Marsh Manor, and there my anxieties became almost unbearable. Bolkonsky began to done me most cruelly.
Other creditors wrote me letters, urging for payments. The jeweler from whom I had bought the turquoises
sent me a letter, telling me if I didn't settle his account by September, he would sue me.
And finally, Balkansky sent a man over, whom I saw in London, and who told me that unless the
sable jacket was paid for within two months, he would lay the matter before Lord Castlecourt.
We went across to Paris in September, and there I saw those dreadful people.
My other French and English creditors I could manage, but I could do nothing with either Bolkonsky or
the jeweler. They spoke harshly to me, as no one has ever spoken to me before. And Bolkonski told me that
it was known Lord Castlecourt was honest and paid his debts whatever his wife was. I prayed him for
time and finally wept, wept to that horrible Jew, and there was another man in the office too who saw me.
But I was lost to all sense of pride or reserve.
I had only one feeling left in me, terror, agony that they would tell my husband,
and he would despise me and leave me.
My misery seemed to have some effect on Balkansky, and he told me that he would give me a month
to pay up. It was then the 10th of September. I waited for a week in a sort of frenzy
of hope that a miracle would occur, and the money come into my hands in some
unexpected way, but, of course, nothing did occur. By the 1st of October, the 1,000 pounds was no
nearer. It was then that the desperate idea entered my mind, which has nearly ruined me,
and caused me such suffering that the memory of it will stay with me forever.
The Castle Court diamonds set in a necklace and valued at 9,000 pounds,
were in my possession. I often wore them, and they were carried about by my maid,
a faithful and honest creature called Sophie Jeffers. On one of my first trips to Paris,
a friend of mine had taken me to the office of a well-known dealer in precious and artificial
stones, who, without its being generally known, did a sort of pawn-broking business among the
upper classes. My friend had gone there to pawn a pearl necklace and had told me all about it,
how much she obtained on the necklace and how she hoped to redeem it within the year,
and how she was to have it copied in imitation pearls. The idea that came to me was to go to this
place and pawn the castle court diamonds, having them duplicated in paste. I went there on the
second day of October. How awful it was. I wore a heavy veil and gave a fictitious name.
Several men looked at the diamonds, and I noticed that they looked at me and whispered together.
Finally, they told me they would give me four thousand pounds on them, at some interest, I've
forgotten what it was now, and that they would replace them with paste so that only an expert could
tell the difference. The next day, I'll have. The next day, I've forgotten what it was now, and that they would replace them with paste, and that they would replace them.
The next day I went back, and they gave me the money.
I do not think they had any idea who I was.
At any rate, while the papers were full of speculations about the Castle Court diamonds,
they made no sign.
I paid off all my debts, both in Paris and London.
I even paid a year's interest on the diamonds.
For a short time I breathed again and was gay and light-hearted.
my husband would never know that I had not paid my bills for five years and had been threatened with a lawsuit.
It was delightful to get rid of this fear, and I was quite my old self. I suppose I ought to have felt more guilty,
but when one is relieved of a great weight, one's conscience is not so sensitive as it gets when there is really nothing to be sensitive about.
It was after I had grown accustomed to feeling free and unworthy that I began to realize what I had done.
I had stolen the diamonds. I was a thief. It did not comfort me much to think that no one might
ever find it out. In fact, I do not think it comforted me at all, and I know in the beginning
I expected it would. It was what I had done that rankled in me.
I felt that I would never be peaceful again till they were redeemed and put back in their old
settings. That was what I continually dreamed of. It seemed to me, if I could see them once more
in their own case, I would be happy and carefree, as I had been in those first perfect years of my
married life. The fear that at this time most haunted me, and was most terrifying, was that
my husband might discover what I had done. His wife, that he had so loved and trusted, had become a thief.
No one who has not gone through it knows how I felt. I did not know that anyone could suffer so.
I went out constantly to try and forget, and when things were very cheerful and amusing,
I sometimes did. And then I remembered, I was a thitherful. I was a thwart. I was a thwart. I was a
thief. I had stolen my husband's diamonds, and, if he ever found it out, what would happen to me?
This was the position I was in when the false diamonds were taken. It was the last thing in the
world I had thought could happen. When, that night of the Duke of Duxbury's dinner,
I saw the empty case and Jeffers' terrified face, the world reeled around me. I could not, for a
moment take it in. Only in my mind, the diamonds had become a sort of nightmare. Anything to do with them
was a menace, and I followed an instinct that had possession of me when I tried to hide the empty case
from my husband. Then, when my mind had cleared and I had time to think, I saw that if they
recovered the paste necklace, they might find out that it was not real, and all would be long. And all would be
It was a horrible predicament. I really did not know what I wanted. If the diamonds were found and
seen to be false, it would all come out, and Herbert would know I was a thief. When I thought of
this, I tried to divert the detectives from hunting for them, and I told that silly, sheepish Mr.
Bryson that I did not see how he could be so sure they were stolen that,
They might have been mislaid. Mr. Bryson seemed surprised, and that made me angry, because,
after all, a diamond necklace is not the sort of thing that gets mislaid, and I felt I had been
foolish and had not gained anything by being so. The days passed, and nothing was heard of the necklace.
I wish desperately now that it would be found, for how, unless it was, could I eventually
redeem the real diamonds, and once more feel honest and respectable.
If I suddenly appeared with them, how could I explain it? Everybody would say I had stolen them,
unless I invented some story about their being lost and then found, and I am not clever at
inventing stories. As to where I should get the money to redeem them, I often thought of that,
but never could think of any way that sounded possible and reasonable.
I have always waited for things to turn up, and they generally did, but in this case,
nothing that I wanted or expected turned up.
Besides, £4,000 is a good deal of money to come into one's hands suddenly and unexpectedly.
If it were a smaller sum, it might, but $4,000.
was too much. There was nobody to die and leave it to me, and I certainly could not steal it or make it
myself. So, as one may see, I was beset with troubles on all sides. The season wore itself away,
and I was glad to be done with it. For the first time, there had been no pleasure in it. Anxieties that
no one guest were always with me, and always I found myself surreptitiously watching my husband
to see if he suspected, to see if he showed any symptoms of growing cold to me and being indifferent.
As I drove through the park in the carriage, these dreary thoughts were always at my heart,
and it was heavy as lead. I forgot the passers-by who were so amusing, and, with my head,
hanging, looked into my lap. Suppose Herbert guessed. Suppose Herbert found out. These were the questions
that went circling through my brain and never stopped. Sometimes, when Herbert was beside me,
I suddenly wanted to cry out. Herbert, I took the diamonds. I was the thief. I can't hide it
anymore or live in this uncertainty. All I want to know is do you hate me, and are you going to
leave me? But I never did it. I looked at Herbert and was afraid. What would I do if he left me?
Go back to Ireland and die. We went to Castlecourt Marsh Manor in the end of June.
By this time I had begun to feel quite ill. Herbert insisted on my consulate. I was a
assaulting a doctor before I left town, and the doctor said my heart was all wrong, and something
was the matter with my nerves. But it was only the sense of guilt that every day grew more
oppressive. I thought I might feel better in the country. I had always disliked it,
and now it seemed like a harbor of refuge, where I could be quiet with my children. I had grown to
hate London. It was London that had played upon my weaknesses and drawn me into all my trouble.
I had not run into dead in the country, and after all, I had never been as happy as I was the
two years after our marriage when we had lived at Castlecourt Marsh Manor. Those were my
beaujure. How bright and beautiful they seemed now, when I looked back on them from these dark days
of fear and disgrace. It was not much better in the country. A change of scene cannot make a difference
when the trouble is a dark secret, and that dark secret kept growing darker every day.
I feared to speak of the diamonds to Herbert, and yet every letter that came for him filled me
with alarm, lest it was either to say that they were found or that they were not found.
Herbert went up to London at intervals and saw Mr. Gilsey, and at night when he came home I trembled so that I found it difficult to stand till he had told me all that Mr. Gilsey had said. Once when he was beginning to tell me that Mr. Gilsey had some idea they had traced the diamonds to Paris, I fainted, and it was some time before they could bring me back. July was very hot, and I gave that. I gave that. I was a lot. I gave that. I was a lot. I was a lot. I was
as the cause of my changed appearance and listless manner. I was really in wretched health,
and Herbert became exceedingly worried about me. He suggested that we should go to the continent
for a trip, but I shrank from the thought of it. I felt as if the sight of Paris, where the diamonds
were waiting to be redeemed, would kill me outright. I did not want to leave Castlecourt Marsh Manor.
to go anywhere. I only wanted to be happy again, to be the way I was before I had taken the diamonds.
And I knew now that this could never be till I told my husband. I knew that to win back my peace of mind,
I had to confess all and hear him say he forgave me. I tried to several times, but it was impossible.
As the moment that I had chosen for confession approached, my heart beat so that I could scarcely breathe, and I trembled like a person in a chill.
With Herbert looking at me so kindly, so tenderly, the words died away on my lips, or I said something quite different to what I had intended saying.
It was useless. As the days went by, I knew.
that I would never dare tell, that for the rest of my life, I would be crushed under the sense of
guilt that seemed too heavy to be born. It was late one afternoon in the middle of July that the crash
came. Never, never shall I forget that day. So dark and awful at first and then, but I must follow the story
just as it happened. Herbert and I had had tea in the library. It was warm weather, and the windows that
led to the terrace were wide open. Through them I could see the beautiful landscape, rolling hills with
great trees dotted over them, all the colors brighter and deeper than at midday, for the sun was getting
low. I was sitting by one of the windows looking out on this and thinking how different
had been my feelings when I had come here as a bride and loved it all, and been so full of joy.
My hands hung limp over the arms of the chair. I had no desire to move or speak. It is so agonizing when you are miserable,
looking back on days that were happy. As I was sitting this way, Thomas, one of the footmen,
came in with the letters. I noticed that he had quite a packet of them. Some were mine, and I laid them on the
table at my elbow. Idily and without interest, I saw that in Herbert's bunch there was a small box,
such as jewelry, is sent about in. Thomas left the room, and I continued looking out of the window,
until I suddenly heard Herbert give a suppressed exclamation. I turned toward him and so,
saw that he had the open box in his hand.
What does this mean, he said.
What an extraordinary thing!
Look here, Gladys.
And he came toward me, holding out the box.
It was full of cotton wool, and, lying on this,
were a great quantity of unset diamonds of different sizes.
My heart gave a leap into my throat.
I sat up, clutching at the arms of the arms of the same.
the chair. What are they? I said, hearing my voice suddenly high and loud. Where did they come from?
I don't know anything about them. It's too odd. See what's written on this piece of paper that was
inside the box. He held out a small piece of paper on which the creases of several folds were
plainly marked. Across it, in typing, ran two sentences. I snatched the paper and read the words.
We don't want your diamonds. You can keep them and with them except our kind regards.
The paper fluttered to my feet. I knew in a moment what it all meant. The thieves had discovered
that the diamonds were paced and had returned them. I was conscious. I was conscious,
of Herbert's startled face suddenly charged with an expression of sharp anxiety as he cried,
Why, Gladys, what is it? You're white as death. He came toward me, but I motioned him away and
rose to my feet. I knew then that the hour had come, and though I suspect I was very white,
I did not feel so frightened as I had done in the past. Those are your diamonds,
Herbert, I said quietly and distinctly.
Or perhaps, I ought to say those are the substitutes for them.
Your diamonds are in Paris, at Berriere's, O'Cathieme, on the Rue Croix de Petichon.
Gladys, he exclaimed, what do you mean?
What are you talking about?
You look so white and strange.
Sit down, darling, and tell me what you mean.
Oh, Herbert, I cried, my very very little.
voice suddenly full of agony. Let me tell you. Don't stop me. If you're angry with me and hate me,
wait till I've finished before you say so. I've got to confess it all. I've got to, dear.
You must listen to me and not frighten me till I have done, for if I don't tell you now,
I shall certainly die. And then I told. I told it all. I didn't leave out a single thing.
My first bills and Bolkonsky and the jeweler and the pawn-broking place and everything was in it.
Once I was started, it was not so hard, and I poured it out.
I didn't try to make it better or ask to be forgiven, but when it was all finished,
I said, in a voice that I could hear was suddenly husky and trembling,
and now I suppose you'll not like me anymore.
It's quite natural that you shouldn't.
I only ask one thing,
and I know, of course, I have no right to ask it.
That is, that you won't send me away from you?
I have been very wicked.
I suppose I ought to be put in prison.
But, oh, Herbert, no matter what,
I've been, I've loved you. That's something. I could not go any further, and there was no need,
for my dear husband did not seem angry at all. He took me all weeping and trembling into his arms
and said the sweetest things to me, the sort of things one doesn't write down with a pen,
just between him and me. And I,
I turned my face into his shoulder and cried feebly.
No one knows how happy I felt
except a person who has been completely miserable
and suddenly finds her misery ended.
It is really worth being miserable
to thoroughly appreciate the joy of being happy again.
Well, that is really the end of the statement.
Herbert went to Paris a few days later and redeemed the diamonds, and they are now being set in imitation of the old settings, which are lost.
I would not go to Paris with him, nor will I go to London next season. Both places are too full of horrible memories.
Perhaps someday I shall feel about them as I did before the diamonds were taken, but now I do not want to be.
want to leave the country at all.
Besides, we can economize here, and the four thousand pounds necessary to get back the stones
was a good deal for Herbert to have to pay out just now.
And then it is so sweet and peaceful in the country.
Nothing troubles one.
Oh, how delightful a thing it is to have an easy conscience!
One does not know how good it is till one has lost it.
it. This finishes my statement. I dare say it is a very bad one, for I am not clever at all,
but it has the one merit of being entirely truthful, and I have told everything, just how wicked I was,
and just why I was so wicked. Nothing has been held back, and nothing has been set down falsely.
It is an unprejudiced and accurate account of my share in the Castle Court Diamond case.
End of Chapter 6.
End of the Castle Court Diamond Mystery by Geraldine Bonner.
