The Moonstone eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 733 pages of information about The Moonstone.

The Moonstone eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 733 pages of information about The Moonstone.

I asked what was to be done next.

“Come back to my office,” said Mr. Bruff.  “Gooseberry, and my second man, have evidently followed somebody else.  Let us hope that they had their eyes about them at any rate!”

When we reached Gray’s Inn Square, the second man had arrived there before us.  He had been waiting for more than a quarter of an hour.

“Well!” asked Mr. Bruff.  “What’s your news?”

“I am sorry to say, sir,” replied the man, “that I have made a mistake.  I could have taken my oath that I saw Mr. Luker pass something to an elderly gentleman, in a light-coloured paletot.  The elderly gentleman turns out, sir, to be a most respectable master iron-monger in Eastcheap.”

“Where is Gooseberry?” asked Mr. Bruff resignedly.

The man stared.  “I don’t know, sir.  I have seen nothing of him since I left the bank.”

Mr. Bruff dismissed the man.  “One of two things,” he said to me.  “Either Gooseberry has run away, or he is hunting on his own account.  What do you say to dining here, on the chance that the boy may come back in an hour or two?  I have got some good wine in the cellar, and we can get a chop from the coffee-house.”

We dined at Mr. Bruff’s chambers.  Before the cloth was removed, “a person” was announced as wanting to speak to the lawyer.  Was the person Gooseberry?  No:  only the man who had been employed to follow Mr. Luker when he left the bank.

The report, in this case, presented no feature of the slightest interest.  Mr. Luker had gone back to his own house, and had there dismissed his guard.  He had not gone out again afterwards.  Towards dusk, the shutters had been put up, and the doors had been bolted.  The street before the house, and the alley behind the house, had been carefully watched.  No signs of the Indians had been visible.  No person whatever had been seen loitering about the premises.  Having stated these facts, the man waited to know whether there were any further orders.  Mr. Bruff dismissed him for the night.

“Do you think Mr. Luker has taken the Moonstone home with him?” I asked.

“Not he,” said Mr. Bruff.  “He would never have dismissed his two policemen, if he had run the risk of keeping the Diamond in his own house again.”

We waited another half-hour for the boy, and waited in vain.  It was then time for Mr. Bruff to go to Hampstead, and for me to return to Rachel in Portland Place.  I left my card, in charge of the porter at the chambers, with a line written on it to say that I should be at my lodgings at half past ten, that night.  The card was to be given to the boy, if the boy came back.

Some men have a knack of keeping appointments; and other men have a knack of missing them.  I am one of the other men.  Add to this, that I passed the evening at Portland Place, on the same seat with Rachel, in a room forty feet long, with Mrs. Merridew at the further end of it.  Does anybody wonder that I got home at half past twelve instead of half past ten?  How thoroughly heartless that person must be!  And how earnestly I hope I may never make that person’s acquaintance!

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The Moonstone from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.