Listerdale Mystery - Agatha Christie [58]
Again they stared at each other.
‘How did it get there, do you think?’
‘I can’t imagine. It’s odd, Ted, just after reading that bit in the paper–about the rubies.’
Edward laughed.
‘You don’t imagine you’re holding fifty thousand pounds in your hand, do you?’
‘I just said it was odd. Rubies set in platinum. Platinum is that sort of dull silvery stuff–like this. Don’t they sparkle and aren’t they a lovely colour? I wonder how many of them there are?’ She counted. ‘I say, Ted, there are twenty-one exactly.’ ‘No!’
‘Yes. The same number as the paper said. Oh, Ted, you don’t think–’
‘It could be.’ But he spoke irresolutely. ‘There’s some sort of way you can tell–scratching them on glass.’
‘That’s diamonds. But you know, Ted, that was a very odd-looking man–the man with the fruit–a nasty-looking man. And he was funny about it–said we’d got more than our money’s worth in the basket.’
‘Yes, but look here, Dorothy, what would he want to hand us over fifty thousand pounds for?’
Miss Pratt shook her head, discouraged.
‘It doesn’t seem to make sense,’ she admitted. ‘Unless the police were after him.’
‘The police?’ Edward paled slightly.
‘Yes. It goes on to say in the paper–“the police have a clue”.’
Cold shivers ran down Edward’s spine.
‘I don’t like this, Dorothy. Supposing the police get after us.’
Dorothy stared at him with her mouth open.
‘But we haven’t done anything, Ted. We found it in the basket.’
‘And that’ll sound a silly sort of story to tell! It isn’t likely.’
‘It isn’t very,’ admitted Dorothy. ‘Oh, Ted, do you really think it is IT? It’s like a fairy story!’
‘I don’t think it sounds like a fairy story,’ said Edward. ‘It sounds to me more like the kind of story where the hero goes to Dartmoor unjustly accused for fourteen years.’
But Dorothy was not listening. She had clasped the necklace round her neck and was judging the effect in a small mirror taken from her handbag.
‘The same as a duchess might wear,’ she murmured ecstatically.
‘I won’t believe it,’ said Edward violently. ‘They’re imitation. They must be imitation.’
‘Yes, dear,’ said Dorothy, still intent on her reflection in the mirror. ‘Very likely.’
‘Anything else would be too much of a–a coincidence.’
‘Pigeon’s blood,’ murmured Dorothy.
‘It’s absurd. That’s what I say. Absurd. Look here, Dorothy, are you listening to what I say, or are you not?’
Dorothy put away the mirror. She turned to him, one hand on the rubies round her neck.
‘How do I look?’ she asked.
Edward stared at her, his grievance forgotten. He had never seen Dorothy quite like this. There was a triumph about her, a kind of regal beauty that was completely new to him. The belief that she had jewels round her neck worth fifty thousand pounds had made of Dorothy Pratt a new woman. She looked insolently serene, a kind of Cleopatra and Semiramis and Zenobia rolled into one.
‘You look–you look–stunning,’ said Edward humbly.
Dorothy laughed, and her laugh, too, was entirely different.
‘Look here,’ said Edward. ‘We’ve got to do something. We must take them to a police station or something.’
‘Nonsense,’ said Dorothy. ‘You said yourself just now that they wouldn’t believe you. You’ll probably be sent to prison for stealing them.’
‘But–but what else can we do?’
‘Keep them,’ said the new Dorothy Pratt.
Edward stared at her.
‘Keep them? You’re mad.’
‘We found them, didn’t we? Why should we think they’re valuable. We’ll keep them and I shall wear them.’
‘And the police will pinch you.’
Dorothy considered this for a minute or two.
‘All right,’ she said. ‘We’ll sell them. And you can buy a Rolls-Royce, or two Rolls-Royces, and I’ll buy a diamond head-thing and some rings.’
Still Edward stared. Dorothy showed impatience.
‘You’ve got your chance now–it’s up to you to take it. We didn’t steal the thing–I wouldn’t hold with that. It’s come to us and it’s probably the only chance we’ll ever have of getting all the things we want. Haven’t you got any spunk at all, Edward Palgrove?’
Edward found his voice.
‘Sell it, you say? That wouldn’t be