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Meanwhile Mr. Grey had had his own anxieties. During this whole
long evening, he had been sustained by the conviction that the
diamond of which he had caught but one passing glimpse was the
Great Mogul of his once famous collection. So sure was he of
this, that at one moment he found himself tempted to enter the
alcove, demand a closer sight of the diamond and settle the
question then and there. He even went so far as to take in his
hands the two cups of coffee which should serve as his excuse for
this intrusion, but his naturally chivalrous instincts again
intervened, and he set the cups down again--this I did not see--
and turned his steps toward the library with the intention of
writing her a note instead. But though he found paper and pen to
hand, he could find no words for so daring a request, and he came
back into the hall, only to hear that the woman he had
contemplated addressing had just been murdered and her great
jewel stolen.
The shock was too much, and as there was no leaving the house
then, he retreated again to the library where he devoured his
anxieties in silence till hope revived again at sight of the
diamond in the inspector's hand, only to vanish under the
machinations of one he did not even recognize when he took the
false jewel from his hand.
The American had outwitted the Englishman and the triumph of evil
was complete.
Or so it seemed. But if the Englishman is slow, he is sure.
Thrown off the track for the time being, Mr. Grey had only to see
a picture of the stiletto in the papers, to feel again that,
despite all appearances, Fairbrother was really not only at the
bottom of the thefts from which his cousin and himself had
suffered, but of this frightful murder as well. He made no open
move--he was a stranger in a strange land and much disturbed,
besides, by his fears for his daughter--but he started a secret
inquiry through his old valet, whom he ran across in the street,
and whose peculiar adaptability for this kind of work he well
knew.
The aim of these inquiries was to determine if the person, whom
two physicians and three assistants were endeavoring to nurse
back to health on the top of a wild plateau in a remote district
of New Mexico, was the man he had once entertained at his own
board in England, and the adventures thus incurred would make a
story in itself. But the result seemed to justify them. Word came
after innumerable delays, very trying to Mr. Grey, that be was
not the same, though he bore the name of Fairbrother, and was
considered by every one around there to be Fairbrother. Mr. Grey,
ignorant of the relations between the millionaire master and his
man which sometimes led to the latter's personifying the former,
was confident of his own mistake and bitterly ashamed of his own
suspicions.
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