<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
<h3>RUTHVEN SMITH'S EYEGLASSES</h3>
<p>Annesley could not read the look. Yet she felt that it might be read, if
her soul and body had not been wrenched apart, and hastily flung together
again, upside down, it seemed, with her brain where her heart had been,
and vice versa.</p>
<p>Why had Ruthven Smith looked at her, as he spoke in his loud voice of the
stolen Malindore diamond—a blue diamond set with small brilliants, in a
ring? Had he found out that she—did he believe—but she could not finish
the thought. It seemed as though the ring Knight had given her—<i>and told
her to hide</i>—was burning her flesh!</p>
<p>Could <i>her</i> blue diamond be the famous diamond, about which the jewel
expert was telling Lady Cartwright? A horrible sensation overcame the
girl. She felt her blood growing cold, and oozing so sluggishly through
her veins that she could count the drops—drip, drip, drip! She hoped
that she had not turned ghastly pale. Above all things she hoped that she
was not going to faint! If she did that, Ruthven Smith would think—what
would he not think?</p>
<p>She found herself praying for strength and the power of self-control that
she might reason with her own intelligence. Of course, if this were the
diamond, Knight didn't dream that it had been stolen.</p>
<p>Just then a hand reached out at her left side and poured champagne into
her glass. It was the hand of Charrington, the butler. Annesley saw that
it was trembling. She had never seen Charrington's hand tremble before.
Butlers' hands were not supposed to tremble. Charrington spilled a little
champagne on the tablecloth, only a very little, no more than a drop or
two, yet Annesley started and glanced up. The butler was moving away when
she caught a glimpse of his face.</p>
<p>It was red, as usual, for his complexion and that of his younger brother
were alike in colouring; but there was a look of <i>strain</i> on his
features, as if he were keeping his muscles taut.</p>
<p>Sir Elmer Cartwright began to talk to her. His voice buzzed unmeaningly
in her ears, as though she were coming out from under the influence of
chloroform.</p>
<p>"What will become of me?" she said to herself, and then was afraid she
had said it aloud. How awful that would be! Her eyes turned imploringly
to Sir Elmer. He was smiling, unaware of anything unusual.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed at random. Fortunately it seemed to be the right
answer; and the relief this assurance gave was like a helping hand to a
beginner skating on thin ice. Sir Elmer went on to repeat some story
which he said he had been telling the Duchess.</p>
<p>Annesley suddenly thought of a woman rider she had seen at a circus when
she was a child. The woman stood on the bare back of one horse and drove
six others, three abreast, all going very fast and noiselessly round a
ring.</p>
<p>"I must drive my thoughts as she did the horses," came flashing into the
girl's head. "I must think this out, and I must listen to Sir Elmer and
go on giving him right answers, and I must look just as usual. <i>I must!</i></p>
<p>"For Knight's sake!" She seemed to hear the words whispered. Why for
Knight's sake? Oh, but of course she must try to think how it would
involve him if the blue diamond was the famous one stolen from the Van
Vrecks' agent on the <i>Monarchic</i>!</p>
<p>He would not be to blame, for if he had known, he would not have bought
the diamond.</p>
<p>And yet, <i>might</i> he not have known? He had told her few details of his
life before they met, but he had said that it had been hard sometimes,
that he had travelled among rough people, and picked up some of their
rough ways. He had confessed frankly that his ideas of right and wrong
had got mixed and blunted. From the first he had never let her call him
good.</p>
<p>Would it seem dreadful to him to buy a jewel which he might guess, from
its low cost, had to be got rid of at almost any price?</p>
<p>Annesley was forced to admit, much as she loved Knight, that his daring,
original nature (so she called it to herself) might enter into strange
adventures and intrigues for sheer joy in taking risks. She imagined that
some wild escapade regretted too late might have led him into association
with the watchers. Maybe they had all three been members of a secret
society, she often told herself, and Knight had left against the others'
will, in spite of threats.</p>
<p>That would be like him; and brave and splendid as was his image in her
heart, she could not say that he would never be guilty of an act which
might be classed as unscrupulous.</p>
<p>This admission, instead of distressing, calmed her. Allowing that he had
certain faults seemed to chase away a dreadful thought which had pressed
near, out of sight, yet close as if it stood behind her chair, leaning
over her shoulder.</p>
<p>For a moment she felt happy again. She would tell Knight what she had
heard about the Malindore diamond, and how like its description was to
hers. Then, no matter how much he might hate to let it go, he must show
the blue diamond ring to Mr. Ruthven Smith and have its identity decided.</p>
<p>The girl drew a long breath, and determined to put the subject out of her
mind until after dinner, so that Sir Elmer Cartwright need not think her
a complete idiot.</p>
<p>But the deep sigh that stirred her bosom stirred also the fine gold chain
on which hung the blue diamond. The chain lay loosely on her shoulders,
lost, or almost lost among soft folds of lace. She wore it like that with
a low dress, not only to prevent it from attracting attention and making
people wonder what ornament she hid, but also because the thin band of
gold, if seen, would break the symmetry of line. It was Knight who had
given her this little piece of advice, the first time after their
marriage that she had dined with him in evening dress, and since then
she had never forgotten to follow it.</p>
<p>To-night, however, feeling suddenly conscious of the chain, she was on
the point of looking down to make sure that it was shrouded in her laces.
Something stopped her. With a quick warning thump of the heart she
glanced across at Ruthven Smith.</p>
<p>A few minutes ago he had not been wearing his eyeglasses. Now they were
on, pinching the high-bridged, thin nose. And he was peering through them
at her—peering at her neck, her dress, as if he searched for something.</p>
<p>Ruthven Smith knew about the blue diamond. He knew that she wore it on
a chain, hidden in her dress. The certainty of this shot through brain
and body like forked lightning and seemed to sear her flesh. She was
afraid. She could not tell yet of what she was afraid, but when she could
disentangle her twisted thoughts one from another the reason would be
clear.</p>
<p>Then it was as if her mind separated itself from the rest of her and
began to run back along the path she had travelled with Knight since the
hour of their first meeting. It ran looking on the ground, seeking and
picking up things dropped and almost forgotten.</p>
<p>Knight had not been pleased when the Countess de Santiago talked to him
of their being together on the <i>Monarchic</i>. The Countess had seemed
wishful to annoy him in some way. She had taken that way. They had known
each other well and for a long time. They knew a good deal about each
other's affairs. Sometimes one would say that the Countess still liked
to annoy Knight, and he resented that. He had been unwilling to have her
asked to Valley House for Easter, though he knew she longed to come.</p>
<p>And Ruthven Smith! Knight had not wanted him. Could it possibly be on
account of the blue diamond? Had Knight heard what <i>she</i> had heard there
at the dinner-table, and was he anxious about what might happen next?</p>
<p>Hastily she flung a glance toward her husband. He was not looking at her,
but it seemed—perhaps she imagined it—that his face had something of
the same tense, strained expression she had caught on Charrington's.</p>
<p>How odd, if it were true, that both should have that look. One would
almost fancy they shared a secret trouble. But Annesley shook the idea
away, as she would have shaken a hornet trying to sting. How dare she let
such a disloyal fancy even cross the threshold of her mind? A secret
between her husband and his servant—a secret concerning the blue
diamond, which stabbed them both with the same prick of anxiety at the
mention of the jewel!</p>
<p>No sooner was the venomous thing dislodged than it crept back and settled
close over her heart. For Knight's eyes turned to her, and in them was
the look of a drowning man.</p>
<p>Just for the fraction of a second she saw it. Then the curtain was drawn
over his real self that had come to the window and signalled for help. He
smiled a friendly smile, and took up the conversation with his right-hand
neighbour. But he had hidden his soul too late. The message could not be
taken back, and Annesley was sure that he, too, had heard the story
Ruthven Smith had told so loudly to Lady Cartwright.</p>
<p>The fact that he had lost his unruffled, nonchalant coolness even for a
single instant warned Annesley that Knight must be desperately troubled.</p>
<p>"He bought the diamond for me, knowing what it was," she told herself,
"and knowing that it must have been stolen. Of course that's why he made
me wear it where nobody could see. But who else knew besides the man who
sold it to Knight? <i>Somebody</i> must have known, and told Mr. Ruthven
Smith. Perhaps the thief himself, hoping to be spared, and to get money
from both sides. That is why Mr. Ruthven Smith accepted the invitation
here, which I was so sure he would refuse. He has come because he thinks
the Malindore diamond is in this house. That must be it! But how can he
have found out that I am wearing it?"</p>
<p>As she thought these things, asking herself questions, sometimes
answering them, sometimes unable to answer, she managed to keep up some
desultory talk first with one of her neighbours, then with the other. It
seemed to take all her strength to do this, and made her feel weak and
broken, not excited and vital, as she had felt on the wonderful night at
the Savoy when "Nelson Smith" had praised her pluck and presence of mind
in saving him from a danger which had never been explained.</p>
<p>How she wished with all her anxious, troubled heart that she knew how to
save him to-night!</p>
<p>It had been very wrong to buy a stolen diamond, but he had done it from
no mercenary motives, for he had given it to her. She supposed that he
had loved the beautiful thing, and felt when it was offered to him that
he could not bear to let it go.... Perhaps the Countess de Santiago had
stolen it on the <i>Monarchic</i>! That might be a cruel thought, but Annesley
could not help having it, for it would explain many things.</p>
<p>Besides, it would help to exonerate Knight. He was very chivalrous where
women were concerned, and he would have felt bound to protect his old
friend. At all events, he could not have given her up to justice, and
very likely she had been in debt and needed money. She had wonderful
clothes, and must be extravagant.</p>
<p>Yes, the more Annesley dwelt on the idea the more convinced she became
that Madalena de Santiago had stolen the blue diamond, and perhaps all
the other things on the <i>Monarchic</i>, while pretending to have a vision in
her crystal of the thief, and of the way the jewel had been smuggled off
the ship. Then the Countess had been angry with Knight, and had tried to
have him suspected, even of being mixed up in the theft—though that last
idea seemed too far-fetched.</p>
<p>"How hateful, how mean of her!" Annesley thought, ashamed because it was
so easy to believe bad things of the Countess, and to pile up one upon
another. "Probably she put it into Constance's head to suggest having Mr.
Ruthven Smith asked. And then she put it into his head to—to——"</p>
<p>The girl stopped short, appalled. <i>What</i> had been put into the jewel
expert's head? What precisely had he come to Valley House to do?</p>
<p>"He has come to <i>find</i> the blue diamond!" the answer flashed into her
brain.</p>
<p>Madalena de Santiago's eyes were as piercing as they were beautiful. She
might have noticed the fine gold chain which her "pal's" wife wore always
round her neck. She might have guessed that the ring with the blue
diamond was hidden at the end of the chain; yet she could not <i>know for
certain</i>, because Knight would never have told her that.</p>
<p>Therefore it followed that neither could Ruthven Smith know for certain.
He meant to find out, and if he did find out, Knight would be punished
far more severely than he deserved for buying a thing illegally come by.</p>
<p>"I will save him again," Annesley resolved.</p>
<p>But how? What might she expect to happen? And whatever it was, how could
she prevent it happening?</p>
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