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Table of Contents

Title Page

Author

The Diamond Master

The Chase of the Golden Plate

About the Publisher

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Author

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Futrelle was born in Pike County, Georgia. He worked for the Atlanta Journal, where he began their sports section; the New York Herald; the Boston Post; and the Boston American, where, in 1905, his Thinking Machine character first appeared in a serialized version of the short story, "The Problem of Cell 13".

Futrelle left the Boston American in 1906 to focus his attention on writing novels. He had a harbor-view house built in Scituate, Massachusetts, which he called "Stepping Stones", and spent most of his time there until his death in 1912.

Returning from Europe aboard the RMS Titanic, Futrelle, a first-class passenger, refused to board a lifeboat, insisting his wife board instead, to the point of forcing her in. His wife remembered the last she saw of him: he was smoking a cigarette on deck with John Jacob Astor IV. Futrelle perished in the Atlantic, and his body was never found. On 29 July 1912, Futrelle's mother, Linnie Futrelle, died in her Georgia home; her death was attributed to grief over her son's death.

His last work, My Lady's Garter, was published posthumously in 1912. Futrelle's widow inscribed in the book, "To the heroes of the Titanic, I dedicate this my husband's book", under a photo of her late husband.

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The Diamond Master

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Chapter 1

The First Diamond

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There were thirty or forty personally addressed letters, the daily heritage of the head of a great business establishment; and a plain, yellow-wrapped package about the size of a cigarette-box, some three inches long, two inches wide and one inch deep. It was neatly tied with thin scarlet twine, and innocent of markings except for the superscription in a precise, copperplate hand, and the smudge of the postmark across the ten-cent stamp in the upper right-hand corner. The imprint of the cancellation, faintly decipherable, showed that the package had been mailed at the Madison Square substation at half-past seven o’clock of the previous evening.

Mr. Harry Latham, president and active head of the H. Latham Company, manufacturing jewelers in Fifth Avenue, found the letters and the package on his desk when he entered his private office a few minutes past nine o’clock. The simple fact that the package bore no return address or identifying mark of any sort caused him to pick it up and examine it, after which he shook it inquiringly. Then, with kindling curiosity, he snipped the scarlet thread with a pair of silver scissors, and unfolded the wrappings. Inside was a glazed paper box, such as jewelers use, but still there was no mark, no printing, either on top or bottom.

The cover of the box came off in Mr. Latham’s hand, disclosing a bed of white cotton. He removed the downy upper layer, and there—there, nestling against the snowy background, blazed a single splendid diamond, of six, perhaps seven, carats. Myriad colors played in its blue-white depths, sparkling, flashing, dazzling in the subdued light. Mr. Latham drew one long quick breath, and walked over to the window to examine the stone in the full glare of day.

A minute or more passed, a minute of wonder, admiration, allurement, but at last he ventured to lift the diamond from the box. It was perfect, so far as he could see; perfect in cutting and color and depth, prismatic, radiant, bewilderingly gorgeous. Its value? Even he could not offer an opinion—only the appraisement of his expert would be worth listening to on that point. But one thing he knew instantly—in the million-dollar stock of precious stones stored away in the vaults of the H. Latham Company, there was not one to compare with this.

At length, as he stared at it fascinated, he remembered that he didn’t know its owner, and for the second time he examined the wrappings, the box inside and out, and finally he lifted out the lower layer of cotton, seeking a fugitive card or mark of some sort. Surely the owner of so valuable a stone would not be so careless as to send it this way, through the mail—unregistered—without some method of identification! Another sharp scrutiny of box and cotton and wrappings left him in deep perplexity.

Then another idea came. One of the letters, of course! The owner of the diamond had sent it this way, perhaps to be set, and had sent instructions under another cover. An absurd, even a reckless thing to do, but ——! And Mr. Latham attacked the heap of letters neatly stacked up in front of him. There were thirty-six of them, but not one even remotely hinted at diamonds. In order to be perfectly sure, Mr. Latham went through his mail a second time. Perhaps the letter of instructions had come addressed to the company, and had gone to the secretary, Mr. Flitcroft.

He arose to summon Mr. Flitcroft from an adjoining room, then changed his mind long enough carefully to replace the diamond in the box and thrust the box into a pigeonhole of his desk. Then he called Mr. Flitcroft in.

“Have you gone through your morning mail?” Mr. Latham inquired of the secretary.

“Yes,” he replied. “I have just finished.”

“Did you happen to come across a letter bearing on—that is, was there a letter today, or has there been a letter of instructions as to a single large diamond which was to come, or had come, by mail?”

“No, nothing,” replied Mr. Flitcroft promptly. “The only letter received today which referred to diamonds was a notification of a shipment from South Africa.”

Mr. Latham thoughtfully drummed on his desk.

“Well, I’m expecting some such letter,” he explained. “When it comes please call it to my attention. Send my stenographer in.”

Mr. Flitcroft nodded and withdrew; and for an hour or more Mr. Latham was engrossed in the routine of correspondence. There was only an occasional glance at the box in the pigeonhole, and momentary fits of abstraction, to indicate an unabated interest and growing curiosity in the diamond. The last letter was finished, and the stenographer arose to leave.

“Please ask Mr. Czenki to come here,” Mr. Latham directed.

And after a while Mr. Czenki appeared. He was a spare little man, with beady black eyes, bushy brows, and a sinister scar extending from the point of his chin across the right jaw. Mr. Czenki drew a salary of twenty-five thousand dollars a year from the H. Latham Company, and was worth twice that much. He was the diamond expert of the firm; and for five or six years his had been the final word as to quality and value. He had been a laborer in the South African diamond fields—the scar was an assegai thrust—about the time Cecil Rhodes’ grip was first felt there; later he was employed as an expert by Barney Barnato at Kimberly, and finally he went to London with Adolph Zeidt. Mr. Latham nodded as he entered, and took the box from the pigeonhole.

“Here’s something I’d like you to look at,” he remarked.

Mr. Czenki removed the cover and turned the glittering stone out into his hand. For a minute or more he stood still, examining it, as he turned and twisted it in his fingers, then walked over to a window, adjusted a magnifying glass in his left eye and continued the scrutiny. Mr. Latham swung around in his chair and stared at him intently.

“It’s the most perfect blue-white I’ve ever seen,” the expert announced at last. “I dare say it’s the most perfect in the world.”

Mr. Latham arose suddenly and strode over to Mr. Czenki, who was twisting the jewel in his fingers, singling out, dissecting, studying the colorful flashes, measuring the facets with practised eyes, weighing it on his finger-tips, seeking a possible flaw.

“The cutting is very fine,” the expert went on. “Of course I would have to use instruments to tell me if it is mathematically correct; and the weight, I imagine, is—is about six carats, perhaps a fraction more.”

“What’s it worth?” asked Mr. Latham. “Approximately, I mean?”

“We know the color is perfect,” explained Mr. Czenki precisely. “If, in addition, the cutting is perfect, and the depth is right, and the weight is six carats or a fraction more, it’s worth—in other words, if that is the most perfect specimen in existence, as it seems to be, it’s worth whatever you might choose to demand for it—twenty, twenty-five, thirty thousand dollars. With this color, and assuming it to be six carats, even if badly cut, it would be worth ten or twelve thousand.”

Mr. Latham mopped his brow. And this had come by mail, unregistered!

“It would not be possible to say where—where such a stone came from—what country?” Mr. Latham inquired curiously. “What’s your opinion?”

The expert shook his head. “If I had to guess I should say Brazil, of course,” he replied; “but that would be merely because the most perfect blue-white diamonds come from Brazil. They are found all over the world—in Africa, Russia, India, China, even in the United States. The simple fact that this color is perfect makes conjecture useless.”

Mr. Latham lapsed into silence, and for a time paced back and forth across his office; Mr. Czenki stood waiting.

“Please get the exact weight,” Mr. Latham requested abruptly. “Also test the cutting. It came into my possession in rather an—an unusual manner, and I’m curious.”

The expert went out. An hour later he returned and placed the white, glazed box on the desk before Mr. Latham.

“The weight is six and three-sixteenths carats,” he stated. “The depth is absolutely perfect according to the diameter of the girdle. The bezelfacets are mathematically correct to the minutest fraction—thirty-three, including the table. The facets on the collet side are equally exact—twenty-five, including the collet, or fifty-eight facets in all. As I said, the color is flawless. In other words,” he continued without hesitation, “I should say, speaking as an expert, that it is the most perfect diamond existing in the world today.”

Mr. Latham had been staring at him mutely, and he still sat silent for an instant after Mr. Czenki had finished.

“And its value?” he asked at last.

“Its value!” Mr. Czenki repeated musingly. “You know, Mr. Latham,” he went on suddenly, “there are a hundred experts, commissioned by royalty, scouring the diamond markets of the world for such stones as this. So, if you are looking for a sale and a price, by all means offer it abroad first.” He lifted the sparkling, iridescent jewel from the box again, and gazed at it reflectively. “There is not one stone belonging to the British crown, for instance, which would in any way compare with this.”

“Not even the Koh-i-noor?” Mr. Latham demanded, surprised.

Mr. Czenki shook his head.

“Not even the Koh-i-noor. It is larger, that’s all—a fraction more than one hundred and six carats, but it has neither the coloring nor the cutting of this.” There was a pause. “Would it be impertinent if I ask who owns this?”

“I don’t know,” replied Mr. Latham slowly. “I don’t know; but it isn’t ours. Perhaps later I’ll be able to——”

“I beg your pardon,” the expert interrupted courteously, and there was a slight expression of surprise on his thin scarred face. “Is that all?”

Mr. Latham nodded absently and Mr. Czenki left the room.

Chapter 2

Tweedledum and Tweedledee

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A little while later, when Mr. Latham started out to luncheon, he thrust the white glazed box into an inside pocket. It had occurred to him that Schultze—Gustave Schultze, the greatest importer of precious stones in America—was usually at the club where he had luncheon, and —

He found Mr. Schultze, a huge blond German, sitting at a table in an alcove, alone, gazing out upon Fifth Avenue in deep abstraction, with perplexed wrinkles about his blue eyes. The German glanced around at Latham quickly as he proceeded to draw out a chair on the opposite side of the table.

“Sid down, Laadham, sid down,” he invited explosively. “I haf yust send der vaiter to der delephone to ask——”

There was a restrained note of excitement in the German’s voice, but at the moment it was utterly lost upon Mr. Latham.

“Schultze, you’ve probably imported more diamonds in the last ten years than any other half-dozen men in the United States,” he interrupted. “I have something here I want you to see. Perhaps, at some time, it may have passed through your hands.”

He placed the glazed box on the table. For an instant the German stared at it with amazed eyes, then one fat hand darted toward it, and he spilled the diamond out on the napkin in his plate. Then he sat gazing as if fascinated by the lambent, darting flashes deep from the blue-white heart.

Mein Gott, Laadham!” he exclaimed, and with fingers which shook a little he lifted the stone and squinted through it toward the light, with critical eyes. Mr. Latham was leaning forward on the table, waiting, watching, listening.

“Well?” he queried impatiently, at last.

“Laadham, id is der miracle!” Mr. Schultze explained solemnly, with his characteristic, whimsical philosophy. “I haf der dupligade of id, Laadham—der dwin, der liddle brudder. Zee here!”

From an inner pocket he produced a glazed white box, identical with that which Mr. Latham had just set down, then carefully laid the cover aside.

“Look, Laadham, look!”

Mr. Latham looked—and gasped! Here was the counterpart of the mysterious diamond which still lay in Mr. Schultze’s outstretched palm.

“Dey are dwins, Laadham,” remarked the German quaintly, finally. “Id came by der mail in dis morning—yust like das, wrapped in paper, but mit no marks, no name, no noddings. Id yust came!”

With his right hand Mr. Latham lifted the duplicate diamond from its cotton bed, and with his left took the other from the German’s hand. Then, side by side, he examined them; color, cutting, diameter, depth, all seemed to be the same.

“Dwins, I dell you,” repeated Mr. Schultze stolidly. “Dweedledum und Dweedledee, born of der same mudder und fadder. Laadham, id iss der miracle! Dey are der most beaudiful der world in-yust der pair of dem.”

“Have you made,” Mr. Latham began, and there was an odd, uncertain note in his voice —“Have you made an expert examination?”

“I haf. I measure him, der deepness, der cudding, der facets, und id iss perfect. Und I take my own judgment of a diamond, Laadham, before any man der vorld in but Czenki.”

“And the weight?”

“Prezizely six und d’ree-sixdeendh carads. Dere iss nod more as a difference of a d’irty-second bedween dem.”

Mr. Latham regarded the importer steadily, the while he fought back an absurd, nervous thrill in his voice.

“There isn’t that much, Schultze. Their weight is exactly the same.”

For a long time the two men sat staring at each other unseeingly. Finally the German, with a prodigious Teutonic sigh, replaced the diamond from Mr. Latham’s right hand in one of the glazed boxes and carefully stowed it away in a cavernous pocket; Mr. Latham mechanically disposed of the other in the same manner.

“Whose are they?” he demanded at length. “Why are they sent to us like this, with no name, no letter of explanation? Until I saw the stone you have I believed this other had been sent to me by some careless fool for setting, perhaps, and that a letter would follow it. I merely brought it here on the chance that it was one of your importations and that you could identify it. But since you have received one under circumstances which seem to be identical, now——” He paused helplessly. “What does it mean?”

Mr. Schultze shrugged his huge shoulders and thoughtfully flicked the ashes from his cigar into the consomme.

“You know, Laadham,” he said slowly, “dey don’t pick up diamonds like dose on der streed gorners. I didn’t believe dere vas a stone of so bigness in der Unided States whose owner I didn’t know id vas. Dose dat are here I haf bring in myself, mostly—dose I did not I haf kept drack of. I don’d know, Laadham, I don’d know. Der longer I lif der more I don’d know.”

The two men completed a scant luncheon in silence.

“Obviously,” remarked Mr. Latham as he laid his napkin aside, “the diamonds were sent to us by the same person; obviously they were sent to us with a purpose; obviously we will, in time, hear from the person who sent them; obviously they were intended to be perfectly matched; so let’s see if they are. Come to my office and let Czenki examine the one you have.” He hesitated an instant. “Suppose you let me take it. We’ll try a little experiment.”

He carefully placed the jewel which the German handed to him, in an outside pocket, and together they went to his office. Mr. Czenki appeared, in answer to a summons, and Mr. Latham gave him the German’s box.

“That’s the diamond you examined for me this morning, isn’t it?” he inquired.

Mr. Czenki turned it out into his hand and scrutinized it perfunctorily.

“Yes,” he replied after a moment.

“Are you quite certain?” Mr. Latham insisted.

Something in the tone caused Mr. Czenki to raise his beady black eyes questioningly for an instant, after which he walked over to a window and adjusted his magnifying glass again. For a moment or more he stood there, then:

“It’s the same stone,” he announced positively.

“Id iss der miracle, Laadham, when Czenki make der mistake!” the German exploded suddenly. “Show him der odder von.”

Mr. Czenki glanced from one to the other with quick, inquisitive glance; then, without a word, Mr. Latham produced the second box and opened it. The expert stared incredulously at the two perfect stones and finally, placing them side by side on a sheet of paper, returned to the window and sat down. Mr. Latham and Mr. Schultze stood beside him, looking on curiously as he turned and twisted the jewels under his powerful glass.

“As a matter of fact,” asked Mr. Latham pointedly at last, “you would not venture to say which of those stones it was you examined this morning, would you?”

“No,” replied Mr. Czenki curtly, “not without weighing them.”

“And if the weight is identical?”

“No,” said Mr. Czenki again. “If the weight is the same there is not the minutest fraction of a difference between them.”

Chapter 3

Thursday at Three

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Mr. Latham ran through his afternoon mail with feverish haste and found—nothing; Mr. Schultze achieved the same result more ponderously. On the following morning the mail still brought nothing. About eleven o’clock Mr. Latham’s desk telephone rang.

“Come to my offiz,” requested Mr. Schultze, in gutteral excitement. “Mein Gott, Laadham, der—come to my offiz, Laadham, und bring der diamond!”

Mr. Latham went. Including himself, there were the heads of the five greatest jewel establishments in America, representing, perhaps, one-tenth of the diamond trade of the country, in Mr. Schultze’s office. He found the other four gathered around a small table, and on this table—Mr. Latham gasped as he looked—lay four replicas of the mysterious diamond in his pocket.

“Pud id down here, Laadham,” directed Mr. Schultze. “Dey’re all dwins alike—Dweedeldums und Dweedledeeses.”

Mr. Latham silently placed the fifth diamond on the table, and for a minute or more the five men stood still and gazed, first at the diamonds, then at one another, and then again at the diamonds. Mr. Solomon, the crisply spoken head of Solomon, Berger and Company, broke the silence.

“These all came yesterday morning by mail, one to each of us just as the one came to you,” he informed Mr. Latham. “Mr. Harris here, of Harris and Blacklock, learned that I had received such a stone, and brought the one he had received for comparison. We made some inquiries together and found that a duplicate had been received by Mr. Stoddard, of Hall–Stoddard-Higginson. The three of us came here to see if Mr. Schultze could give us any information, and he telephoned for you.”

Mr. Latham listened blankly.

“It’s positively beyond belief,” he burst out. “What—what does it mean?”

“Id means,” the German importer answered philosophically, “dat if diamonds like dese keep popping up like dis, dat in anoder d’ree months dey vill nod be vorth more as five cents a bucketful.”

The truth of the observation came to the four others simultaneously. Hitherto there had been only the sense of wonder and admiration; now came the definite knowledge that diamonds, even of such great size and beauty as these, would grow cheap if they were to be picked out of the void; and realization of this astonishing possibility brought five shrewd business brains to a unit of investigation. First it was necessary to find how many other jewelers had received duplicates; then it was necessary to find whence they came. A plan was adopted, and an investigation ordered to begin at once.

“Dere iss someding back of id, of course,” declared Mr. Schultze. “Vas iss? Dey are nod being send for our healdh!”

During the next six days half a score of private detectives were at work on the mystery, with the slender clews at hand. They scanned hotel registers, quizzed paper-box manufacturers, pestered stamp clerks, bedeviled postal officials, and the sum total of their knowledge was negative, save in the fact that they established beyond question that only these five men had received the diamonds.

And meanwhile the heads of the five greatest jewel houses in New York were assiduous in their search for that copperplate superscription in their daily mail. On the morning of the eighth day it came. Mr. Latham was nervously shuffling his unopened personal correspondence when he came upon it—a formal white square envelope, directed by that same copperplate hand which had directed the boxes. He dropped into his chair, and opened the envelope with eager fingers. Inside was this letter:

My Dear Sir:

One week ago I took the liberty of sending to you, and to each of four other leading jewelers of this city whose names you know, a single large diamond of rare cutting and color. Please accept this as a gift from me, and be good enough to convey my compliments to the other four gentlemen, and assure them that theirs, too, were gifts.

Believe me, I had no intention of making a mystery of this. It was necessary definitely to attract your attention, and I could conceive of no more certain way than in this manner. In return for the value of the jewels I shall ask that you and the four others concerned give me an audience in your office on Thursday afternoon next at three o’clock; that you make known this request to the others; and that three experts whose judgment you will all accept shall meet with us.

I believe you will appreciate the necessity of secrecy in this matter, for the present at least. Respectfully,

E. Van Cortlandt Wynne

They were on hand promptly, all of them—Mr. Latham, Mr. Schultze, Mr. Solomon, Mr. Stoddard and Mr. Harris. The experts agreed upon were the unemotional Mr. Czenki, Mr. Cawthorne, an Englishman in the employ of Solomon, Berger and Company, and Mr. Schultze, who gravely admitted that he was the first expert in the land, after Mr. Czenki, and whose opinion of himself was unanimously accepted by the others. The meeting place was the directors’ room of the H. Latham Company.

At one minute of three o’clock a clerk entered with a card, and handed it to Mr. Latham.

“‘Mr. E. van Cortlandt Wynne,’” Mr. Latham read aloud, and every man in the room moved a little in his chair. Then: “Show him in here, please.”

“Now, gendlemens,” observed Mr. Schultze sententiously, “ve shall zee vat ve shall zee.”

The clerk went out and a moment later Mr. Wynne appeared. He was tall and rather slender, alert of eyes, graceful of person; perfectly self-possessed and sure of himself, yet without one trace of egotism in manner or appearance—a fair type of the brisk, courteous young business man of New York. He wore a tweed suit, and in his left hand carried a small sole-leather grip. For an instant he stood, framed by the doorway, meeting the sharp scrutiny of the assembled jewelers with a frank smile. For a little time no one spoke—merely gazed—and finally:

“Mr. Latham?” queried Mr. Wynne, looking from one to the other.

Mr. Latham came to his feet with a sudden realization of his responsibilities as a temporary host, and introductions followed. Mr. Wynne passed along on one side of the table, shaking hands with each man in turn until he came to Mr. Czenki. Mr. Latham introduced them.

“Mr. Czenki,” repeated Mr. Wynne, and he allowed his eyes to rest frankly upon the expert for a moment. “Your name has been repeated to me so often that I almost feel as if I knew you.”

Mr. Czenki bowed without speaking.

“I am assuming that this is the Mr. Czenki who was associated with Mr. Barnato and Mr. Zeidt?” the young man went on.

“That is correct, yes,” replied the expert.

“And I believe, too, that you once did some special work for Professor Henri Moissan in Paris?”

Mr. Czenki’s black eyes seemed to be searching the other’s face for an instant, and then he nodded affirmatively.

“I made some tests for him, yes,” he volunteered.

Mr. Wynne passed on along the other side of the long table, and stopped at the end. Mr. Latham was at his right, Mr. Schultze at his left, and Mr. Czenki sat at the far end, facing him. The small sole-leather grip was on the floor at Mr. Wynne’s feet. For a moment he permitted himself to enjoy the varying expressions of interest on the faces around the table.

“Gentlemen,” he began, then, “you all, probably, have seen my letter to Mr. Latham, or at least you are aware of its contents, so you understand that the diamonds which were mailed to you are your property. I am not a eleemosynary institution for the relief of diamond merchants,” and he smiled a little, “for the gifts are preliminary to a plain business proposition—a method of concentrating your attention, and, in themselves, part payment, if I may say it, for any worry or inconvenience which followed upon their appearance. There are only five of them in the world, they are precisely alike, and they are yours. I beg of you to accept them with my compliments.”

Mr. Schultze tilted his chair back a little, the better to study the young man’s countenance.

“I am going to make some remarkable statements,” the young man continued, “but each of those statements is capable of demonstration here and now. Don’t hesitate to interrupt if there is a question in your mind, because everything I shall say is vital to each of you as bearing on the utter destruction of the world’s traffic in diamonds. It is coming, gentlemen, it is coming, just as inevitably as that night follows day, unless you stop it. You can stop it by concerted action, in a manner which I shall explain later.”

He paused and glanced along the table. Only the face of Mr. Czenki was impassive.

“Since the opening of the fields in South Africa,” Mr. Wynne resumed quietly, “something like five hundred million dollars’ worth of diamonds have been found there; and we’ll say arbitrarily that all the other diamond fields of the world, including Brazil and Australia, have produced another five hundred million dollars’ worth—in other words, since about 1868 a billion dollars’ worth of diamonds has been placed upon the market. Gentlemen, that represents millions and millions of carats—forty, fifty, sixty million carats in the rough, say. Please bear those figures in mind a moment.

“Now, suddenly, and as yet secretly, the diamond output of the world has been increased fiftyfold—that is, gentlemen, within the year I can place another billion dollars’ worth of diamonds, at the prices that hold now, in the open market; and within still another year I can place still another billion in the market; and on and on indefinitely. To put it differently, I have found the unlimited supply.”

Mein Gott, vere iss id?” demanded the German breathlessly.

Heedless of the question, Mr. Wynne leaned forward on the table, and gazed with half-closed eyes into the faces before him. Incredulity was the predominant expression, and coupled with that was amazement. Mr. Harris, with quite another emotion displaying itself on his face, pushed back his chair as if to rise; a slight wrinkle in his brow was all the evidence of interest displayed by Mr. Czenki.

“I am not crazy, gentlemen,” Mr. Wynne went on after a moment, and the perfectly normal voice seemed to reassure Mr. Harris, for he sat still. “The diamonds are now in existence, untold millions of dollars’ worth of them—but there is the tedious work of cutting. They’re in existence, packed away as you pack potatoes—I thrust my two hands into a bag and bring them out full of stones as perfect as the ones I sent you.”

He straightened up again and the deep earnestness of his face relaxed a little.

“I believe you said, Mr. Wynne, that you could prove any assertion you might make, here and now?” suggested Mr. Latham coldly. “It occurs to me that such extraordinary statements as these demand immediate proof.”

Mr. Wynne turned and smiled at him.

“You are quite right,” he agreed; and then, to all of them: “It’s hardly necessary to dwell upon the value of colored diamonds—the rarest and most precious of all—the perfect rose-color, the perfect blue and the perfect green.” He drew a small, glazed white box from his pocket and opened it. “Please be good enough to look at this, Mr. Czenki.”

He spun a rosily glittering object some three-quarters of an inch in diameter, along the table toward Mr. Czenki. It flamed and flashed as it rolled, with that deep iridescent blaze which left no doubt of what it was. Every man at the table arose and crowded about Mr. Czenki, who held a flamelike sphere in his outstretched palm for their inspection. There was a tense, breathless instant.

“It’s a diamond!” remarked Mr. Czenki, as if he himself had doubted it. “A deep rose-color, cut as a perfect sphere.”

“It’s worth half a million dollars if it’s worth a cent!” exclaimed Mr. Solomon almost fiercely.

“And this, please.”

Mr. Wynne, from the other end of the table, spun another glittering sphere toward them—this as brilliantly, softly green as the verdure of early spring, prismatic, gleaming, radiant. Mr. Czenki’s beady eyes snapped as he caught it and held it out for the others to see, and some strange emotion within caused him to close his teeth savagely.

“And this!” said Mr. Wynne again.

And a third sphere rolled along the table. This was blue—elusively blue as a moonlit sky. Its rounded sides caught the light from the windows and sparkled it back.

And now the three jewels lay side by side in Mr. Czenki’s open hand, the while the five greatest diamond merchants of the United States glutted their eyes upon them. Mr. Latham’s face went deathly white from sheer excitement, the German’s violently red from the same emotion, and the others—there was amazement, admiration, awe in them. Mr. Czenki’s countenance was again impassive.

Chapter 4

The Unlimited Supply

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“If you will all be seated again, please?” requested Mr. Wynne, who still stood, cool and self-certain, at the end of the table.

The sound of his voice brought a returning calm to the others, and they resumed their seats—all save Mr. Cawthorne, who walked over to a window with the three spheres in his hand and stood there examining them under his glass.

“You gentlemen know, of course, the natural shape of the diamond in the rough?” Mr. Wynne resumed questioningly. “Here are a dozen specimens which may interest you—the octahedron, the rhombic dodecahedron, the triakisoctahedron and the hexakisoctahedron.” He spread them along the table with a sweeping gesture of his hand, colorless, inert pebbles, ranging in size from a pea to a peanut. “And now, you ask, where do they come from?”

The others nodded unanimously.

“I’ll have to state a fact that you all know, as part answer to that question,” replied Mr. Wynne. “A perfect diamond is a perfect diamond, no matter where it comes from—Africa, Brazil, India or New Jersey. There is not the slightest variation in value if the stone is perfect. That being true, it is a matter of no concern to you, as dealers, where these come from—sufficient it is that they are here, and, being here, they bring home to you the necessity of concerted action to uphold the diamond as a thing of value.”

“You said der vorld’s oudpud had been increased fiftyfold?” suggested Mr. Schultze. “Do ve understand you prove him by dese?”

The young man smiled slightly and drew a leather packet from an inner pocket. He stripped it of several rubber bands, and then turned to Mr. Czenki again.

“Mr. Czenki, I have been told that a few years ago you had an opportunity of examining the Koh-i-noor. Is that correct?”

“Yes.”

“I believe the Koh-i-noor was temporarily removed from its setting, and that you were one of three experts to whom was intrusted the task of selecting four stones of the identical coloring to be set alongside it?”

“That is correct,” Mr. Czenki agreed.

“You held the Koh-i-noor in your hand, and you would be able to identify it?”

I would be able to identify it,” said Mr. Cawthorne positively.

He had turned at the window quickly; it was the first time he had spoken. Mr. Wynne walked around the table to Mr. Czenki, and Mr. Cawthorne approached them.

“Suppose, then, you gentlemen examine this together,” suggested Mr. Wynne.

He lifted a great glittering jewel from the leather packet and held it aloft that all might see. Then he carefully placed it on the table in front of the experts; the others came to their feet and stood gazing as if fascinated.

“By Jove!” exclaimed Mr. Cawthorne.

For a minute or more the two experts studied the huge diamond—one hundred and six carats and a fraction—beneath their glasses, and finally Mr. Cawthorne picked it up and led the way toward the window. Mr. Czenki and the German followed him.

“Gentlemen,” and Mr. Cawthorne now turned sharply to face the others, “this is the Koh-i-noor! Mr. Czenki didn’t mention it, but I was one of the three experts who had opportunity to examine the Koh-i-noor. This is the Koh-i-noor!”

Startled, questioning eyes were turned upon Mr. Wynne; he was smiling. There was a question in his face as he regarded Mr. Czenki.

“It is either the Koh-i-noor or an exact duplicate,” said Mr. Czenki.

“It is the Koh-i-noor,” repeated Mr. Cawthorne doggedly.

“Id seems to me,” interposed Mr. Schultze, “dat if der Koh-i-noor vas missing somebody would haf heard, ain’d id? I haf nod heard. Mr. Czenki made a misdake der oder day—maybe you make id today?”

“You have made a mistake, I assure you, Mr. Cawthorne,” remarked Mr. Wynne quietly. “You identify that as the Koh-i-noor, of course, by a slight inaccuracy in one of the facets adjoining the collet. That inaccuracy is known to every diamond expert—the mistake you make is a compliment to that as a replica.”

He resumed his position at the end of the table, and Mr. Schultze sat beside him. Amazement was a thing of the past, as far as he was concerned. Mr. Czenki dropped into his chair again.