"Behold!" he heralded, and flung it back.
The scintillations which leaped out to meet them, were like the rays from myriads of gleaming, glistening, varicolored lights, of dazzling brightness and infinite depth. A wonderful cavern of coruscating splendor--rubies and diamonds, emeralds and sapphires, pearls and opals glowing with all the fire of self, and the resentment of long neglect.
"Heaven! What beauty!" exclaimed Davila.
It broke the spell.
"They are real!" Croyden laughed. "You may touch them--they will not fade."
They put them out on the table--in little heaps of color. The women exclaiming whene"er they touched them, cooingly as a woman does when handling jewels--fondling them, caressing them, loving them.
At last, the box was empty. They stood back and gazed--fascinated by it all:--the color--the glowing reds and whites, and greens and blues.
"It is wonderful! wonderful!" breathed Elaine.
"It is wonderful--and it"s true!" said Croyden.
Two necklaces lay among the rubies, alike as lapidary"s art could make them. Croyden handed one to Macloud, the other he took.
"In remembrance of your release, and of Parmenter"s treasure!" he said, and clasped it around Elaine"s fair neck.
Macloud clasped his around Davila"s.
"Who cares, now, for the time spent on Greenberry Point or the double reward!" he laughed.