<h2 class="caps"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></SPAN>Chapter XVII</h2>
<p>Holmes quietly hid behind a large beer-barrel
at the foot of the stairs, while I could hear old
man Tooter rattling several bottles at the other
end of the cellar, and talking to himself the
while.</p>
<p>"Let's see: Here's the beautiful Amontillado
wine from that lovely Spain that gave me my
Teresa," muttered the aged dotard.</p>
<p>Then I heard the sound of something gurgling
in his throat, evidently the Spanish wine
that he had poured out, as there was always a
good supply of glasses alongside the wine-bins.</p>
<p>"Now where in thunder did I put that diamond
cuff-button?" came the voice of Tooter
again, while I sat still on the top step of the
cellar-stairs, just inside the door, from which
point I could see the tip of Holmes's long, lean,
aquiline nose peering out from behind the barrel
below me.</p>
<p>"It isn't under the Muenchener barrel,—it
must be under the Dortmunder," continued
Tooter to himself, as I heard him laboriously
heave over the barrel and paw around on the
cement floor under it, in the space between the
head of the barrel and the raised ends of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</SPAN></span>
staves, "Ah! here it is,—the cute little diamond
that that nutty George has been after, which I
have been keeping since last Monday to oblige a
fellow-sport, Billie Budd, but which I have decided
must be taken out of the vulgar crude cuff-button
and reset in an engagement ring for
Teresa, since she is so dippy after historical
relics!"</p>
<p>Then I heard a long-drawn sigh of relief, as
Tooter drew himself a foaming stein-ful of the
Dortmunder beer.</p>
<p>In a minute more he started back toward the
stairs, and as he passed the barrel there at the
foot of the stairs, Holmes suddenly jumped out
and grabbed him with both hands, seizing the
diamond cuff-button from him at the same instant.</p>
<p>"Ah! I've got you now, old wine-bibber!
old diamond-thief! Look thou not upon the
German beer when it is light yellow, or it shall
surely get thee, sooner or later!" shouted
Holmes in triumph, while Tooter was so surprised
and scared he could hardly speak. "Watson,
you can unlock the door up there now, and
we'll proceed to the Earl's usual place of business
and disburse unto him his tenth stolen
cuff-button. You fooled me all right yesterday
morning, Tooter, but,—by the brainless cranium
of Barnabas Letstrayed, I've certainly
got the goods on you now!"</p>
<p>I unlocked the cellar-door and stepped out
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</SPAN></span>
into the kitchen, where the French and Russian
pancake-tossers stared in astonishment as Hemlock
Holmes came marching up the cellar-stairs
with a firm hand on Uncle Tooter's
shoulder, and then columned left in a parade
through the dining-room on the way to the
library.</p>
<p>"At-ten-<i>shun</i>!" called out my partner. "Present
cuff-button! Salute! Most noble Earl of
Puddingham, here is your tenth and second
last stolen gem!"</p>
<p>Thereupon Holmes laid the glittering thing
in the Earl's hand, while that worthy fell back
weakly in his chair and stammered:</p>
<p>"What? Is Uncle Tooter guilty too? Ye
gods and little fishes! Up to the very last I
had hoped that none of the disgrace of this
robbery would rest upon his sturdy shoulders,
but now I see that it has, anyhow. And I suppose
he claims that Billie Budd made him do it,
against his better nature, like all the other
simps you have jerked up, eh?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Billie Budd was in on this too," replied
Holmes, as he carelessly lit another coffin-nail
and turning around, calmly blew the smoke in
the face of Thorneycroft, who had just come in;
"but the old gent didn't have to tell me that.
I overheard him conversing to himself about it
down in your worshipful wine-cellar, where he
had the cuff-button hidden under a beer-barrel.
If Tooter ever expects to get along well in the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</SPAN></span>
diamond-swiping business, he will certainly
have to cut out the highly reprehensible habit
of talking to himself, particularly when somebody
else might be listening. I guess that's all,
Earl, for the present, although if I were you I
would keep these ten recovered cuff-buttons in
some safer place than that dinky little jewel
cabinet on your dresser, since a little bird recently
informed me that the desperate William
X. Budd, the author of all these atrocities, is
about to visit Normanstow Towers to-morrow
morning, and attempt to carry them all off for
good. Be advised in time now, George."</p>
<p>And Holmes quietly pushed Uncle Tooter
into a Turkish rocker back of him, and walked
serenely out of the room, his cocky old head in
the air, and with me trailing humbly along behind
him, because it had become the usual thing
with me.</p>
<p>"Watson," said he, when he had led me out
through a side entrance onto the noble castle
lawn, "something tells me that we should take
a little stroll around these lovely flower-beds
that Herr Blumenroth has been so assiduously
taking care of. See, there's the old boy now,
kneeling down by that geranium bed over there,
while his bone-headed assistant, Demetrius
What's-his-name, wheels the barrowful of fertilizer
down from the shed behind the stables.
Let's go over."</p>
<p>We joined the elderly and phlegmatic gardener,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</SPAN></span>
and after joshing him a little about the
beauty of the plants he was growing, Holmes
began to ask him some leading questions about
whether Lord Launcelot hadn't been loafing
around the flower-beds on the previous Easter
Monday at a time when he naturally would be
expected to be up in the billiard room, shooting
his head off at his favorite indoor game.</p>
<p>Heinrich was not at all backward about informing
on the Earl's junior brother, and I
gathered from his very frank remarks that he,
Heinrich, did not hold a very high opinion of
the said Launcelot's intellectual abilities. It
seems that the latter had been loafing around
Blumenroth most of the day Monday, and several
times the gardener had caught him monkeying
with his trowel, trying to dig up one of
the flower-beds in a very unscientific manner,
which same monkeying had greatly exacerbated
Heinrich's none too admirable temper.</p>
<p>"It looked as if he was trying to hide something
under the ground, Mr. Holmes, like a
dog burying a bone," said the gardener to us;
"and after he had kept it up awhile, interfering
with my work all the time, I could stand it no
longer and told him loudly to beat it, which he
did. As soon as he was gone, I quickly turned
over all the earth in the flower-bed with my
trowel, but couldn't find a thing, so I suppose
the simp must have taken it away with him,
whatever it was."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Not caring at all whether it was one of the
diamond cuff-buttons we have been after or not,
eh? My, but aren't you the independent cuss,
Heinie? Why didn't you tell me this last Tuesday
morning, when I interrogated you, among
all the servants, huh?"</p>
<p>"Because you simply asked me then what I
knew about the stolen diamonds, and I told you
quite truthfully that I didn't know who stole
them, though I might have added, just as truthfully,
that I didn't care a darn <i>who</i> stole them!
Sufficient unto the job is the regular labor
thereof, without helping quasi-detectives from
London to do their work for them. I'm being
paid by the Earl to take care of the gardens,
and that only; while you're the guy that he's
paying to find his cussed old cuff-buttons for
him. I wouldn't give a nickel for the whole
lot of them, anyhow!"</p>
<p>And the gardener calmly turned his back on
us, and went ahead with his spading up, while
Demetrius spread the fertilizer.</p>
<p>"Gosh, that guy takes my breath away, he's
so fresh! But then, we've got all the information
out of him that we need, so come along,
Watson."</p>
<p>Holmes then led me back to the castle, where
we entered and proceeded along till we met
Lord Launcelot idly fingering the keys of the
piano in the music-room.</p>
<p>"Ah, good afternoon, Your Lordship," said
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</SPAN></span>
Holmes suavely, as we entered the room and
Launcelot faced about on the piano-stool toward
us. "This thing called music is indeed a delightful
surcease from the dull cares of the day, but
finer still would be the resolution in young men
of noble lineage to keep their lily-white hands
off of property that is not listed on the tax-duplicate
in their name, and to refrain from
dishonest and secret contact with uncouth
crooks from Australia, who induce them to forget
their family pride and to conceal valuable
gems from the eye of the law! In other words,
to come right down to brass tacks, you stole
one of the diamond cuff-buttons,—gol darn it!—and
I want you to hand it back to me before
I become so brutal as to seize you and take it
away from you!"</p>
<p>Launcelot, however, did not avow his probable
guilt so readily as his brother's revered
uncle-in-law had done, but laughed right in
Holmes's face as the latter concluded his little
speech of accusation.</p>
<p>"Why, you old false alarm you,—do you
think for a minute that you can bluff me like
that? I didn't take any of the cuff-buttons. Go
on and guess again. Maybe the cat took 'em,
or maybe George walked in his sleep and threw
them away down the road!" said he.</p>
<p>But his pleasantry was lost on Hemlock
Holmes, who advanced a step toward him and,
in menacing tones, demanded the instant return
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</SPAN></span>
of the final cuff-button. At this point the
door from the corridor opened, and old Uncle
Tooter came in, without any present contrition
for his recently confessed share in the robbery
showing in his face.</p>
<p>"What's this stiff of a Holmes trying to hand
you now, Launcie my boy?" he inquired, as
Holmes turned and faced him angrily at the
interruption and I held myself ready for an
emergency.</p>
<p>"Why, the old magnifying-glass-peeker says
that I stole one of the Earl's cuff-buttons!
Wouldn't that frost you? I've been trying to
get it into his head that he's struck a snag
here, but he can't see it that way," replied
Launcelot, rising from the piano-stool and
brushing off his trouser-legs.</p>
<p>"Well, he'll have to, anyhow—that's all,"
said Tooter, and he added, as he grabbed
Holmes around the body with both arms: "Run
like h—— now, Launcie, and I'll hold him until
you're safe!"</p>
<p>Launcelot instantly ran out of the room at
top speed, while Holmes and Tooter wrestled
around for a moment; then the former jerked
himself away and chased out into the corridor
after me, and up the stairway, where I had
started to pursue the recreant Launcelot.</p>
<p>"Here, get out of the way, Watson, and let
somebody run that <i>can</i> run!" he yelled, as he
overtook me, legging it up four steps at a time.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The two of us then chased Launcelot up
flight after flight of the green-carpeted stairs,
to the second, third, fourth, and fifth stories,
while I nearly lost my breath as we came to the
fifth and top floor and saw Launcelot disappearing
through a trapdoor leading to the castle
roof. Up the narrow little wooden ladder we
bounced after him, through the trapdoor, and
out onto the broad spreading roof of the ancient
and venerable Normanstow Towers.</p>
<p>"Oh, gee! first down in the cellar, and then
up on the roof! This detective business is getting
my goat!" I panted, leaning against a
chimney-top where I stood gasping for breath,
while the indomitable Holmes pursued the fleeing
Launcelot across the stone roof to the opposite
side, and there cornered him finally in
an angle formed by the battlemented wall surrounding
the roof and a small tower about ten
feet in diameter at its edge.</p>
<p>Launcelot was squeezed up against the gray
stone embrasure at that place by Holmes, who
quickly forced the eleventh and last diamond
cuff-button out of his nerveless grasp, then
turned triumphantly to me, his faithful but out-of-breath
squire, while the spring breezes ruffled
the sparse hair on his uncovered head, and
the gentle afternoon sun shone down on as queer
a scene as had ever taken place during our association,—crying:</p>
<p>"Well, here we are at last, Watson. We've
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</SPAN></span>
got each and every one of the Earl's diamonds
now, and our labors are over, with a large part
of County Surrey as the smiling audience for
the finale of our little detective drama, as we
stand up here sixty feet or more above the
ground! Now let's go down and acquaint His
Honor the Earl with the glad tidings before the
wind blows all my hair off!"</p>
<p>He led the way back to the trapdoor, and
down through it to the stairs, with Lord Launcelot
following after us like a whipped cur.</p>
<hr class="chapbreak" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</SPAN></span></p>
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