The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins (top 5 books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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Her complexion turned of a beautiful red, which I had never seen in it before; she brightened all over with a kind of speechless and breathless surprise. âWho is it?â I asked. Rosanna gave me back my own question. âOh! who is it?â she said softly, more to herself than to me. I twisted round on the sand and looked behind me. There, coming out on us from among the hills, was a bright-eyed young gentleman, dressed in a beautiful fawn-coloured suit, with gloves and hat to match, with a rose in his button-hole, and a smile on his face that might have set the Shivering Sand itself smiling at him in return. Before I could get on my legs, he plumped down on the sand by the side of me, put his arm round my neck, foreign fashion, and gave me a hug that fairly squeezed the breath out of my body. âDear old Betteredge!â says he. âI owe you seven-and-sixpence. Now do you know who I am?â
Lord bless us and save us! Hereâfour good hours before we expected himâwas Mr. Franklin Blake!
Before I could say a word, I saw Mr. Franklin, a little surprised to all appearance, look up from me to Rosanna. Following his lead, I looked at the girl too. She was blushing of a deeper red than ever, seemingly at having caught Mr. Franklinâs eye; and she turned and left us suddenly, in a confusion quite unaccountable to my mind, without either making her curtsey to the gentleman or saying a word to me. Very unlike her usual self: a civiller and better-behaved servant, in general, you never met with.
âThatâs an odd girl,â says Mr. Franklin. âI wonder what she sees in me to surprise her?â
âI suppose, sir,â I answered, drolling on our young gentlemanâs Continental education, âitâs the varnish from foreign parts.â
I set down here Mr. Franklinâs careless question, and my foolish answer, as a consolation and encouragement to all stupid peopleâit being, as I have remarked, a great satisfaction to our inferior fellow-creatures to find that their betters are, on occasions, no brighter than they are. Neither Mr. Franklin, with his wonderful foreign training, nor I, with my age, experience, and natural mother-wit, had the ghost of an idea of what Rosanna Spearmanâs unaccountable behaviour really meant. She was out of our thoughts, poor soul, before we had seen the last flutter of her little grey cloak among the sandhills. And what of that? you will ask, naturally enough. Read on, good friend, as patiently as you can, and perhaps you will be as sorry for Rosanna Spearman as I was, when I found out the truth.
The first thing I did, after we were left together alone, was to make a third attempt to get up from my seat on the sand. Mr. Franklin stopped me.
âThere is one advantage about this horrid place,â he said; âwe have got it all to ourselves. Stay where you are, Betteredge; I have something to say to you.â
While he was speaking, I was looking at him, and trying to see something of the boy I remembered, in the man before me. The man put me out. Look as I might, I could see no more of his boyâs rosy cheeks than of his boyâs trim little jacket. His complexion had got pale: his face, at the lower part was covered, to my great surprise and disappointment, with a curly brown beard and moustachios. He had a lively touch-and-go way with him, very pleasant and engaging, I admit; but nothing to compare with his free-and-easy manners of other times. To make matters worse, he had promised to be tall, and had not kept his promise. He was neat, and slim, and well made; but he wasnât by an inch or two up to the middle height. In short, he baffled me altogether. The years that had passed had left nothing of his old self, except the bright, straightforward look in his eyes. There I found our nice boy again, and there I concluded to stop in my investigation.
âWelcome back to the old place, Mr. Franklin,â I said. âAll the more welcome, sir, that you have come some hours before we expected you.â
âI have a reason for coming before you expected me,â answered Mr. Franklin. âI suspect, Betteredge, that I have been followed and watched in London, for the last three or four days; and I have travelled by the morning instead of the afternoon train, because I wanted to give a certain dark-looking stranger the slip.â
Those words did more than surprise me. They brought back to my mind, in a flash, the three jugglers, and Penelopeâs notion that they meant some mischief to Mr. Franklin Blake.
âWhoâs watching you, sir,âand why?â I inquired.
âTell me about the three Indians you have had at the house today,â says Mr. Franklin, without noticing my question. âItâs just possible, Betteredge, that my stranger and your three jugglers may turn out to be pieces of the same puzzle.â
âHow do you come to know about the jugglers, sir?â I asked, putting one question on the top of another, which was bad manners, I own. But you donât expect much from poor human natureâso donât expect much from me.
âI saw Penelope at the house,â says Mr. Franklin; âand Penelope told me. Your daughter promised to be a pretty girl, Betteredge, and she has kept her promise. Penelope has got a small ear and a small foot. Did the late Mrs. Betteredge possess those inestimable advantages?â
âThe late Mrs. Betteredge possessed a good many defects, sir,â says I. âOne of them (if you will pardon my mentioning it) was never keeping to the matter in hand. She was more like a fly than a woman: she couldnât settle on anything.â
âShe would just have suited me,â says Mr. Franklin. âI never settle on anything either. Betteredge, your edge is better than ever. Your daughter said as much, when I asked for particulars about the jugglers. âFather will tell you, sir. Heâs a wonderful man for his age; and he expresses himself beautifully.â Penelopeâs own wordsâblushing divinely. Not even my respect for you prevented me fromânever mind; I knew her when she was a child, and sheâs none the worse for it. Letâs be serious. What did the jugglers do?â
I was something dissatisfied with my daughterânot for letting Mr. Franklin kiss her; Mr. Franklin was welcome to thatâbut for forcing me to tell her foolish story at second hand. However, there was no help for it now but to mention the circumstances. Mr. Franklinâs merriment all died away as I went on. He sat knitting his eyebrows, and twisting his beard. When I had done, he repeated after me two of the questions which the chief juggler had put to the boyâseemingly for the purpose of fixing them well in his mind.
ââIs it on the road to this house, and on no other, that the English gentleman will travel today?â âHas the English gentleman got It about him?â I suspect,â says Mr. Franklin, pulling a little sealed paper parcel out of his pocket, âthat âItâ means this. And âthis,â Betteredge, means my uncle Herncastleâs famous Diamond.â
âGood Lord, sir!â I broke out, âhow do you come to be in charge of the wicked Colonelâs Diamond?â
âThe wicked Colonelâs will has left his Diamond as a birthday present to my cousin Rachel,â says Mr. Franklin. âAnd my father, as the wicked Colonelâs executor, has given it in charge to me to bring down here.â
If the sea, then oozing in smoothly over the Shivering Sand, had been changed into dry land before my own eyes, I doubt if I could have been more surprised than I was when Mr. Franklin spoke those words.
âThe Colonelâs Diamond left to Miss Rachel!â says I. âAnd your father, sir, the Colonelâs executor! Why, I would have laid any bet you like, Mr. Franklin, that your father wouldnât have touched the Colonel with a pair of tongs!â
âStrong language, Betteredge! What was there against the Colonel. He belonged to your time, not to mine. Tell me what you know about him, and Iâll tell you how my father came to be his executor, and more besides. I have made some discoveries in London about my uncle Herncastle and his Diamond, which have rather an ugly look to my eyes; and I want you to confirm them. You called him the âwicked Colonelâ just now. Search your memory, my old friend, and tell me why.â
I saw he was in earnest, and I told him.
Here follows the substance of what I said, written out entirely for your benefit. Pay attention to it, or you will be all abroad, when we get deeper into the story. Clear your mind of the children, or the dinner, or the new bonnet, or what not. Try if you canât forget politics, horses, prices in the City, and grievances at the club. I hope you wonât take this freedom on my part amiss; itâs only a way I have of appealing to the gentle reader. Lord! havenât I seen you with the greatest authors in your hands, and donât I know how ready your attention is to wander when itâs a book that asks for it, instead of a person?
I spoke, a little way back, of my ladyâs father, the old lord with the short temper and the long tongue. He had five children in all. Two sons to begin with; then, after a long time, his wife broke out breeding again, and the three young ladies came briskly one after the other, as fast as the nature of things would permit; my mistress, as before mentioned, being the youngest and best of the three. Of the two sons, the eldest, Arthur, inherited the title and estates. The second, the Honourable John, got a fine fortune left him by a relative, and went into the army.
Itâs an ill bird, they say, that fouls its own nest. I look on the noble family of the Herncastles as being my nest; and I shall take it as a favour if I am not expected to enter into particulars on the subject of the Honourable John. He was, I honestly believe, one of the greatest blackguards that ever lived. I can hardly say more or less for him than that. He went into the army, beginning in the Guards. He had to leave the Guards before he was two-and-twentyânever mind why. They are very strict in the army, and they were too strict for the Honourable John. He went out to India to see whether they were equally strict there, and to try a little active service. In the matter of bravery (to give him his due), he was a mixture of bull-dog and game-cock, with a dash of the savage. He was at the taking of Seringapatam. Soon afterwards he changed into another regiment, and, in course of time, changed into a third. In the third he got his last step as lieutenant-colonel, and, getting that, got also a sunstroke, and came home to England.
He came back with a character that closed the doors of all his family against him, my lady (then just married) taking the lead, and declaring (with Sir Johnâs approval, of course) that her brother should never enter any house of hers. There was more than one slur on the Colonel that made people shy of him; but the blot of the Diamond is all I need mention here.
It was said he had got possession of his Indian jewel by means which, bold as he was, he didnât dare acknowledge. He never attempted to sell itânot being in need of money, and not (to give him his due again) making money an object. He never gave it away; he never even showed it to any living soul. Some said he was afraid of its getting him into a difficulty with the military authorities; others (very ignorant indeed of the real nature of the man) said he was afraid, if he showed it, of its costing him his life.
There was perhaps a grain of truth mixed up with this last report. It was false to say that he was afraid; but it was a fact that his life had been twice threatened in India; and it was firmly believed that the Moonstone was at the bottom of it. When he came back to England, and found himself avoided by everybody, the Moonstone was thought to be at the bottom of it again. The mystery of the Colonelâs life got in the Colonelâs way, and outlawed him, as you may say, among his own people. The men wouldnât let him into their clubs; the womenâmore than oneâwhom
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