By this time Chatworth, still seated, had caught sight of it. "h.e.l.lo,"
he said, "what sort of a thing is that?"
It was a short, shabby, nondescript little figure, shuffling rapidly along the winding walk between the rose bushes. Now they saw the top of his round black felt hat. Now only a twinkling pair of legs. Now, around the last clump of bushes he appeared full length, and, suddenly dropping his businesslike shuffle, approached them at a languid walk.
Flora grasped Chatworth"s arm in nervous terror. "Tell him to go," she whispered; "make him go away."
The blue-eyed Chinaman was planted before them stolidly, with the curious blind look of his guarded eyes blinking in his withered face. He wore for the first time the blouse of his people, and his hands were folded in his sleeves.
"Who"s this?" said Chatworth, appealing to Flora.
At this the Chinaman spoke. "Mr. Crew," he croaked.
The Englishman, looking from the Oriental to Flora, still demanded explanations with expostulating gesture.
"It is the man who sold us the sapphire," she whispered; and "Oh, what does he want of you?"
"Eh?" said Chatworth, interrogating the goldsmith with his monocle.
"What do you want?"
The little man finished his long, and, what had seemed his blind, stare; then dived into his sleeve. He drew forth a crumpled thing which seemed to be a pellet and this he proceeded to unfold. Flora crept cautiously forward, loath to come near, but curious, and saw him spread out and hold up a roughly torn triangle of newspaper. She gave a cry at sight of it. Across the top in thick black type ran the figures $20,000.
Chatworth pointed a stern forefinger. "What is it?" he said, though by his tone he knew.
The Chinaman also pointed at it, but cautious and apologetic. "Twenty thousand dollar. You likee twenty thousand dollar?" He waited a moment.
Then, with a glimmer as of returning sight, presented the alternative.
"You likee G.o.d?--little joss?--come so?" And with his finger he traced in the air a curve of such delicate accuracy that the Englishman with an exclamation made a step toward him. But the Chinaman did not move.
"Twenty thousand dollar," he stated. It sounded an impersonal statement, but nevertheless it was quite evident this time to whom it applied.
The Englishman measured off his words slowly as if to an incomplete understanding, which Flora was aware was all too miraculously quick.
"This little G.o.d, this ring--do you know where it is? Can you take me to it?"
The goldsmith nodded emphatically at each word, but when all was said he only reiterated, "Twenty thousand dollar."
Chatworth gave Flora an almost shamefaced glance, and she saw with a curious twinge of jealousy that he was intensely excited. "Might as well have a pot-shot at it," he said; and sitting down on the edge of the fountain and taking out his check-book, rested it on his knee and wrote.
Then he rose; he held up the filled-in slip before the Chinaman"s eyes.
"Here," he said, "twenty thousand dollars." He held the paper well out of the little man"s reach. "Now," he challenged, "tell me where it is?"
Into the goldsmith"s eyes came a lightning flash of intelligence, such as Flora remembered to have seen there when Farrell Wand, leaning on the dusty counter, had bidden him go and bring something pretty. He seemed to quiver a moment in indecision. Then he whipped his hand out of his sleeve and held it forth palm upward. This time it was Chatworth who cried out. The thing that lay on the goldsmith"s palm Flora had never seen, though once it had been described to her--"a bit of an old gold heathen G.o.d, curled around himself, with his head of two yellow sapphires and a big blue stone on top."
There it blazed at her, the jewel she had carried in her bosom, that she had hidden in her pouch of gold, and that had vanished from it at the touch of a magic hand, now cunningly restored to its right place in the forehead of the Crew Idol, crowning him with living light.
Speechless they looked together at the magic thing. They had thought it far at sea; and as if at a wave of a genii"s wand it was here before them flashing in the quiet garden.
With an effort Chatworth seemed to keep himself from seizing on ring and man together. He looked searchingly at the goldsmith and seemed on the point of asking a question, but, instead, he slowly held out his hand.
He held it out cup-fashion. It shook so that Flora saw the Chinaman steady it to drop in the ring. Then, folding his check miraculously small, enveloping it in the ragged piece of newspaper, the little man turned and shuffled from them down the gravel walk.
Chatworth stood staring after him with his Idol in his palm. Then, turning slow eyes to Flora, "How did he come by this?" he asked, as sternly as if he demanded it of the mystery itself.
"He had it, from the very first." The pieces of the puzzle were flashing together in Flora"s mind. "That first time Harry left the exhibit he took it there."
"But the blue sapphire?" Chatworth insisted.
"Harry," Flora whispered, "Harry gave it up to him."
"Gave it up to him!" Chatworth echoed in scorn.
But she had had an inspiration of understanding. "He had to--for money to get off with. He gave Clara all he had so that she would let him get away. Poor thing!" she added in a lower breath, but Chatworth did not hear her. He had taken the Idol in his thumb and finger, and, holding it up in the broadening light, looked fixedly at it with the pa.s.sionate incredulity with which one might hold and look at a friend thought dead.
She watched him with her jealous pang increasing to a greater feeling--a feeling of being separated from him by this jewel which he loved, and which had grown to seem hateful to her, which had shown itself a breeder of all the greedy pa.s.sions. She came softly up to him, and, lifting her hand, covered the Idol.
He turned toward her in wonder.
"Ah, you love it too much," she whispered.
"That"s unworthy of you," he reproached her. "I have loved you more; and that in spite of what I believed of you, and what this means to me. To me, this ring is not a pretty thing seen yesterday. It is the symbol of my family. It is the power and pride of us, which our women have worn on their hands as they have worn our honor in their hearts. It is part of the life of my people and now it has made itself part of our life, of yours and mine. Shall I ever forget how starkly you held it for the sake of my honor, even against myself? Should I ever have known you without it?" He put the ring into her hand, and, smiling with his old dare, held it over the fountain. "Now, if you want to, drop it in." He released her hand and turned to leave her to her will.
For a moment she stood with power in her hands and her eyes on his averted head. Then with a little rush she crossed the s.p.a.ce between them. "Here, take it! You love it! I want you to keep it! but I can"t forget the dreadful things it has made people do. It makes me afraid."
In spite of his smiling he seemed to her very grave. "You dear, silly child! The whole storm and trouble of life comes from things being in the wrong place. This has been in the wrong place and made mischief."
"Like me," she murmured.
"Like you," he agreed. "Now we shall be as we should be. Give me your hand."
He drew off all the rings with which she had once tried to dim the sparkle of the sapphire, and, dropping them into his pocket like so much dross, slipped on the Idol that covered her third finger in a splendid bar from knuckle to joint. Holding her by just the tip of that finger, leaning back a little, he looked into her eyes, and she, looking back, knew that it wedded them once for all.
THE END