The Moonstone Wilkie Collins (ebook reader for manga .txt) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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I answered, âYes,â to both those questions.
âIf youâll excuse my suggesting it, weâll step out briskly,â said the Sergeant. âI want to find the place where she left the shore, before it gets dark.â
We had walked, I should say, a couple of hundred yards towards Cobbâs Hole, when Sergeant Cuff suddenly went down on his knees on the beach, to all appearance seized with a sudden frenzy for saying his prayers.
âThereâs something to be said for your marine landscape here, after all,â remarked the Sergeant. âHere are a womanâs footsteps, Mr. Betteredge! Let us call them Rosannaâs footsteps, until we find evidence to the contrary that we canât resist. Very confused footsteps, you will please to observeâ âpurposely confused, I should say. Ah, poor soul, she understands the detective virtues of sand as well as I do! But hasnât she been in rather too great a hurry to tread out the marks thoroughly? I think she has. Hereâs one footstep going from Cobbâs Hole; and here is another going back to it. Isnât that the toe of her shoe pointing straight to the waterâs edge? And donât I see two heel-marks further down the beach, close at the waterâs edge also? I donât want to hurt your feelings, but Iâm afraid Rosanna is sly. It looks as if she had determined to get to that place you and I have just come from, without leaving any marks on the sand to trace her by. Shall we say that she walked through the water from this point till she got to that ledge of rocks behind us, and came back the same way, and then took to the beach again where those two heel marks are still left? Yes, weâll say that. It seems to fit in with my notion that she had something under her cloak, when she left the cottage. No! not something to destroyâ âfor, in that case, where would have been the need of all these precautions to prevent my tracing the place at which her walk ended? Something to hide is, I think, the better guess of the two. Perhaps, if we go on to the cottage, we may find out what that something is?â
At this proposal, my detective-fever suddenly cooled. âYou donât want me,â I said. âWhat good can I do?â
âThe longer I know you, Mr. Betteredge,â said the Sergeant, âthe more virtues I discover. Modestyâ âoh dear me, how rare modesty is in this world! and how much of that rarity you possess! If I go alone to the cottage, the peopleâs tongues will be tied at the first question I put to them. If I go with you, I go introduced by a justly respected neighbour, and a flow of conversation is the necessary result. It strikes me in that light; how does it strike you?â
Not having an answer of the needful smartness as ready as I could have wished, I tried to gain time by asking him what cottage he wanted to go to.
On the Sergeant describing the place, I recognised it as a cottage inhabited by a fisherman named Yolland, with his wife and two grownup children, a son and a daughter. If you will look back, you will find that, in first presenting Rosanna Spearman to your notice, I have described her as occasionally varying her walk to the Shivering Sand, by a visit to some friends of hers at Cobbâs Hole. Those friends were the Yollandsâ ârespectable, worthy people, a credit to the neighbourhood. Rosannaâs acquaintance with them had begun by means of the daughter, who was afflicted with a misshapen foot, and who was known in our parts by the name of Limping Lucy. The two deformed girls had, I suppose, a kind of fellow-feeling for each other. Anyway, the Yollands and Rosanna always appeared to get on together, at the few chances they had of meeting, in a pleasant and friendly manner. The fact of Sergeant Cuff having traced the girl to their cottage, set the matter of my helping his inquiries in quite a new light. Rosanna had merely gone where she was in the habit of going; and to show that she had been in company with the fisherman and his family was as good as to prove that she had been innocently occupied so far, at any rate. It would be doing the girl a service, therefore, instead of an injury, if I allowed myself to be convinced by Sergeant Cuffâs logic. I professed myself convinced by it accordingly.
We went on to Cobbâs Hole, seeing the footsteps on the sand, as long as the light lasted.
On reaching the cottage, the fisherman and his son proved to be out in the boat; and Limping Lucy, always weak and weary, was resting on her bed upstairs. Good Mrs. Yolland received us alone in her kitchen. When she heard that Sergeant Cuff was a celebrated character in London, she clapped a bottle of Dutch gin and a couple of clean pipes on the table, and stared as if she could never see enough of him.
I sat quiet in a corner, waiting to hear how the Sergeant would find his way to the subject of Rosanna Spearman. His usual roundabout manner of going to work proved, on this occasion, to be more roundabout than ever. How he managed it is more than I could tell at the time, and more than I can tell now. But this is certain, he began with the Royal Family, the Primitive Methodists, and the price of fish; and he got from that (in his dismal, underground way) to the loss of the Moonstone, the spitefulness of our first housemaid, and the hard behaviour of the women-servants generally towards Rosanna Spearman. Having reached his subject in this fashion, he described himself as making his inquiries about the lost Diamond, partly with a view to find
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