<h2><SPAN name="div1_07" href="#div1Ref_07">THE DATCHET DIAMONDS ARE PLACED IN SAFE CUSTODY</SPAN></h2>
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<p class="normal">When the morning came, and Mr. Paxton found himself being
cross-examined by the manager, with every probability of his, later
on, having to undergo an examination by the police, he was as taciturn
as possible. Although he was by no means sorry that he had fired that
shot, and so effectually frightened the man upon the ladder, he would
infinitely rather that less fuss had been made about it afterwards.</p>
<p class="normal">One thing Mr. Paxton had decided to do before he left his bedroom. He
had decided to remove the Datchet diamonds to a place of safety. That
Mr. Lawrence and his friends had a very shrewd notion that they were
in his possession was plain; that they were disposed to stick at
nothing which would enable them to get hold of them again was, if
possible, plainer. Mr. Paxton was resolute that they should not have
them, who ever did.</p>
<p class="normal">It happened that, in his more prosperous days, he had rented one of
the Chancery Lane Deposit Company's safes. Nor was the term of his
tenancy at an end. He determined to do a bold, and, one might add, an
impudent thing. He would carry the duchess' diamonds back with him to
town, lock them in the safe he rented, and then, whatever might
happen, nobody but himself would ever be able to have access to them
again. He had the Gladstone bag brought up to his bedroom, removed
from it the precious parcel, returned the bag itself to the manager's
keeping, and, declining to have his morning meal at the hotel, went up
by the Pullman train to town, and breakfasted on board. He flattered
himself that whoever succeeded in taking from him the diamonds before
his arrival with them in Chancery Lane, would have to be a very clever
person.</p>
<p class="normal">Still, he did not manage to reach his journey's end without having had
one or two little adventures by the way.</p>
<p class="normal">He drove up from the hotel to the station in a hansom cab. As he
stepped into the cab he noticed, standing on the kerbstone a little to
the left of the hotel entrance, a man who wore his billycock a good
deal on the side of his head, and who had a cigar sticking out of the
corner of his mouth.</p>
<p class="normal">He should not have particularly observed the fellow had not the man,
as soon as he found Mr. Paxton's eyes turned in his direction,
performed a right-about-face on his heels, and presented an almost
ostentatious view of the middle of the back. When Mr. Paxton's cab
rattled into the central yard, and Mr. Paxton proceeded to step out
from it on to the pavement, another hansom came dashing up behind his
own, and from it there alighted the man who had turned his back on him
in front of the hotel. As Mr. Paxton took his ticket this man was at
his side. And, having purchased his morning paper, as he strolled up
the platform towards the train, he noticed that the fellow was only a
few steps in his rear.</p>
<p class="normal">There seemed to be no reasonable room for doubt that the man was
acting as his shadow. No one likes to feel that he is under espionage.
And Mr. Paxton in particular felt that just recently he had endured
enough of that kind of thing to last--if his own tastes were to be
consulted--for the remainder of his life. He decided to put a stop
there and then to, at any rate, this man's persecution. Suddenly
standing still, wheeling sharply round, Mr. Paxton found himself face
to face with the individual with his hat on the side of his head.</p>
<p class="normal">"Are you following me?"</p>
<p class="normal">Mr. Paxton's manner as he asked the question, though polite, meant
mischief. The other seemed to be a little taken aback. Then, with an
impudent air, taking what was left of his cigar out of his mouth, he
blew a volume of smoke full into Mr. Paxton's eyes.</p>
<p class="normal">"Were you speaking to me?"</p>
<p class="normal">Mr. Paxton's fingers itched to knock the smoker down. But situated as
he was, a row in public just then would have been sheer madness. He
adopted what was probably an even more effective plan. He signalled to
a passing official.</p>
<p class="normal">"Guard!" The man approached. "This person has been following me from
my hotel. Be so good as to call a constable. His proceedings require
explanation."</p>
<p class="normal">The man began to bluster.</p>
<p class="normal">"What do you mean by saying I've been following you? Who are you, I
should like to know? Can't any one move about except yourself?
Following you, indeed! It's more likely that you've been following
me!"</p>
<p class="normal">A constable came up. Mr. Paxton addressed him in his cool, incisive
tones.</p>
<p class="normal">"Officer, this person has followed me from my hotel to the station;
from the station to the booking-office; from the booking-office to the
bookstall; and now he is following me from the bookstall to the train.
I have some valuable property on me, with which fact he is possibly
acquainted. Since he is a complete stranger to me, I should be obliged
if you would ask him what is the cause of the unusual interest which
he appears to take in my movements."</p>
<p class="normal">The man with the cigar became apologetic.</p>
<p class="normal">"The gentleman's quite mistaken; I'm not following him; I wouldn't do
such a thing! I'm going to town by this train, and it seems that this
gentleman's going too, and perhaps that's what's made him think that I
was following. If there's any offence, I'm sure that I beg pardon."</p>
<p class="normal">The man held out his hand--it was unclean and it was big--as if
expecting Mr. Paxton to grasp it. Mr. Paxton, however, moved away
addressing a final observation to the constable as he went.</p>
<p class="normal">"Officer, be so good as to keep an eye upon that man."</p>
<p class="normal">Mr. Paxton entered the breakfast carriage. What became of the too
attentive stranger he neither stopped to see nor cared to inquire. He
saw no more of him; that was all he wanted. As the train rushed
towards town he ate his breakfast and he read his paper.</p>
<p class="normal">The chief topic of interest in the journals of the day was the robbery
on the previous afternoon of the Duchess of Datchet's diamonds. It
filled them to the almost complete exclusion of other news of topical
importance. There were illustrations of some of the principal jewels
which had been stolen, together with anecdotes touching on their
history--very curious some of them were! The Dukes of Datchet seemed
to have gathered those beautiful gems, if not in ways which were dark,
then occasionally, at any rate, in ways which were, to say the least
of it, peculiar. Those glittering pebbles seemed to have been mixed up
with a good deal of trickery and fraud and crime.</p>
<p class="normal">The papers gave the most minute description of the more important
stones. Even the merest novice in the knowledge of brilliants, if he
had mastered those details, could scarcely fail to recognise them if
ever they came his way. It appeared that few even royal collections
possessed so large a number of really fine examples. Their valuation
at a quarter of a million was the purest guesswork. The present duke
would not have accepted for them twice that sum.</p>
<p class="normal">Half a million! Five hundred thousand pounds! At even 3 per cent.--and
who does not want more for his money than a miserable 3 per cent.?--
that was fifteen thousand pounds a year. Three hundred pounds a week.
More than forty pounds a day. Over three pounds for every working
hour. And Mr. Paxton had it in his pockets!</p>
<p class="normal">It was not strange that Mr. Lawrence and his associates should betray
such lively anxiety to regain possession of such a sum as that; it
would have been strange if they had not! It was a sum worth having;
worth fighting for; worth risking something for as well.</p>
<p class="normal">And yet there was something; indeed, there was a good deal, which
could be said for the other side of the question. Mr. Paxton owned to
himself that there was. He could not honestly--if it were still
possible to speak of honesty in connection with a gentleman who had
launched himself on such a venture--lay his hand upon his heart, and
say that he was happier since he had discovered what were the contents
of somebody else's Gladstone bag. On the contrary, if he could have
blotted out of his life the few hours which had intervened since the
afternoon of the previous day, he would have done so, even yet, with a
willing hand.</p>
<p class="normal">Nor was this feeling lessened by an incident which took place on his
arrival at London Bridge. If he were of an adventurous turn of mind,
evidently he could not have adopted a more certain means of gratifying
his peculiar taste than by retaining possession of the duchess's
diamonds. Adventures were being heaped on him galore.</p>
<p class="normal">As he was walking down the platform, looking for a likely cab, some
one came rushing up against him from behind with such violence as to
send him flying forward on his face. Two roughly dressed men assisted
him to rise. But, while undergoing their kindly ministrations, it
occurred to him, in spite of his half-dazed condition, that they were
evincing a livelier interest in the contents of his pockets than in
his regaining his perpendicular. He managed to shake them off,
however, before their interest had been carried to too generous a
length.</p>
<p class="normal">The inevitable crowd had gathered. A man, attired as a countryman, was
volubly explaining--with a volubility which was hardly suggestive of a
yokel--that he was late for market, and was hurrying along without
looking where he was going, when he stumbled against the gentleman,
and was so unfortunate as to knock him over. He was profuse, and
indeed almost lachrymose, in his apologies for the accident which his
clumsiness had occasioned. Mr. Paxton said nothing. He did not see
what there was to say. He dusted himself down, adjusted his hat, got
into a cab and drove away.</p>
<p class="normal">Drove straight away to Chancery Lane. And, when he had deposited the
Duchess of Datchet's diamonds in his safe, and had left them behind
him in that impregnable fortress, where, if the statements of the
directors could be believed, fire could not penetrate, nor water, nor
rust, nor thieves break through and steal, he felt as if a load had
been lifted off his mind.</p>
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<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
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