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<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<p>The nearest way to the garden, on going out of my lady's sitting-room, was
by the shrubbery path, which you already know of. For the sake of your
better understanding of what is now to come, I may add to this, that the
shrubbery path was Mr. Franklin's favourite walk. When he was out in the
grounds, and when we failed to find him anywhere else, we generally found
him here.</p>
<p>I am afraid I must own that I am rather an obstinate old man. The more
firmly Sergeant Cuff kept his thoughts shut up from me, the more firmly I
persisted in trying to look in at them. As we turned into the shrubbery
path, I attempted to circumvent him in another way.</p>
<p>"As things are now," I said, "if I was in your place, I should be at my
wits' end."</p>
<p>"If you were in my place," answered the Sergeant, "you would have formed
an opinion—and, as things are now, any doubt you might previously
have felt about your own conclusions would be completely set at rest.
Never mind for the present what those conclusions are, Mr. Betteredge. I
haven't brought you out here to draw me like a badger; I have brought you
out here to ask for some information. You might have given it to me no
doubt, in the house, instead of out of it. But doors and listeners have a
knack of getting together; and, in my line of life, we cultivate a healthy
taste for the open air."</p>
<p>Who was to circumvent THIS man? I gave in—and waited as patiently as
I could to hear what was coming next.</p>
<p>"We won't enter into your young lady's motives," the Sergeant went on; "we
will only say it's a pity she declines to assist me, because, by so doing,
she makes this investigation more difficult than it might otherwise have
been. We must now try to solve the mystery of the smear on the door—which,
you may take my word for it, means the mystery of the Diamond also—in
some other way. I have decided to see the servants, and to search their
thoughts and actions, Mr. Betteredge, instead of searching their
wardrobes. Before I begin, however, I want to ask you a question or two.
You are an observant man—did you notice anything strange in any of
the servants (making due allowance, of course, for fright and fluster),
after the loss of the Diamond was found out? Any particular quarrel among
them? Any one of them not in his or her usual spirits? Unexpectedly out of
temper, for instance? or unexpectedly taken ill?"</p>
<p>I had just time to think of Rosanna Spearman's sudden illness at
yesterday's dinner—but not time to make any answer—when I saw
Sergeant Cuff's eyes suddenly turn aside towards the shrubbery; and I
heard him say softly to himself, "Hullo!"</p>
<p>"What's the matter?" I asked.</p>
<p>"A touch of the rheumatics in my back," said the Sergeant, in a loud
voice, as if he wanted some third person to hear us. "We shall have a
change in the weather before long."</p>
<p>A few steps further brought us to the corner of the house. Turning off
sharp to the right, we entered on the terrace, and went down, by the steps
in the middle, into the garden below. Sergeant Cuff stopped there, in the
open space, where we could see round us on every side.</p>
<p>"About that young person, Rosanna Spearman?" he said. "It isn't very
likely, with her personal appearance, that she has got a lover. But, for
the girl's own sake, I must ask you at once whether SHE has provided
herself with a sweetheart, poor wretch, like the rest of them?"</p>
<p>What on earth did he mean, under present circumstances, by putting such a
question to me as that? I stared at him, instead of answering him.</p>
<p>"I saw Rosanna Spearman hiding in the shrubbery as we went by," said the
Sergeant.</p>
<p>"When you said 'Hullo'?"</p>
<p>"Yes—when I said 'Hullo!' If there's a sweetheart in the case, the
hiding doesn't much matter. If there isn't—as things are in this
house—the hiding is a highly suspicious circumstance, and it will be
my painful duty to act on it accordingly."</p>
<p>What, in God's name, was I to say to him? I knew the shrubbery was Mr.
Franklin's favourite walk; I knew he would most likely turn that way when
he came back from the station; I knew that Penelope had over and over
again caught her fellow-servant hanging about there, and had always
declared to me that Rosanna's object was to attract Mr. Franklin's
attention. If my daughter was right, she might well have been lying in
wait for Mr. Franklin's return when the Sergeant noticed her. I was put
between the two difficulties of mentioning Penelope's fanciful notion as
if it was mine, or of leaving an unfortunate creature to suffer the
consequences, the very serious consequences, of exciting the suspicion of
Sergeant Cuff. Out of pure pity for the girl—on my soul and my
character, out of pure pity for the girl—I gave the Sergeant the
necessary explanations, and told him that Rosanna had been mad enough to
set her heart on Mr. Franklin Blake.</p>
<p>Sergeant Cuff never laughed. On the few occasions when anything amused
him, he curled up a little at the corners of the lips, nothing more. He
curled up now.</p>
<p>"Hadn't you better say she's mad enough to be an ugly girl and only a
servant?" he asked. "The falling in love with a gentleman of Mr. Franklin
Blake's manners and appearance doesn't seem to me to be the maddest part
of her conduct by any means. However, I'm glad the thing is cleared up: it
relieves one's mind to have things cleared up. Yes, I'll keep it a secret,
Mr. Betteredge. I like to be tender to human infirmity—though I
don't get many chances of exercising that virtue in my line of life. You
think Mr. Franklin Blake hasn't got a suspicion of the girl's fancy for
him? Ah! he would have found it out fast enough if she had been
nice-looking. The ugly women have a bad time of it in this world; let's
hope it will be made up to them in another. You have got a nice garden
here, and a well-kept lawn. See for yourself how much better the flowers
look with grass about them instead of gravel. No, thank you. I won't take
a rose. It goes to my heart to break them off the stem. Just as it goes to
your heart, you know, when there's something wrong in the servants' hall.
Did you notice anything you couldn't account for in any of the servants
when the loss of the Diamond was first found out?"</p>
<p>I had got on very fairly well with Sergeant Cuff so far. But the slyness
with which he slipped in that last question put me on my guard. In plain
English, I didn't at all relish the notion of helping his inquiries, when
those inquiries took him (in the capacity of snake in the grass) among my
fellow-servants.</p>
<p>"I noticed nothing," I said, "except that we all lost our heads together,
myself included."</p>
<p>"Oh," says the Sergeant, "that's all you have to tell me, is it?"</p>
<p>I answered, with (as I flattered myself) an unmoved countenance, "That is
all."</p>
<p>Sergeant Cuff's dismal eyes looked me hard in the face.</p>
<p>"Mr. Betteredge," he said, "have you any objection to oblige me by shaking
hands? I have taken an extraordinary liking to you."</p>
<p>(Why he should have chosen the exact moment when I was deceiving him to
give me that proof of his good opinion, is beyond all comprehension! I
felt a little proud—I really did feel a little proud of having been
one too many at last for the celebrated Cuff!)</p>
<p>We went back to the house; the Sergeant requesting that I would give him a
room to himself, and then send in the servants (the indoor servants only),
one after another, in the order of their rank, from first to last.</p>
<p>I showed Sergeant Cuff into my own room, and then called the servants
together in the hall. Rosanna Spearman appeared among them, much as usual.
She was as quick in her way as the Sergeant in his, and I suspect she had
heard what he said to me about the servants in general, just before he
discovered her. There she was, at any rate, looking as if she had never
heard of such a place as the shrubbery in her life.</p>
<p>I sent them in, one by one, as desired. The cook was the first to enter
the Court of Justice, otherwise my room. She remained but a short time.
Report, on coming out: "Sergeant Cuff is depressed in his spirits; but
Sergeant Cuff is a perfect gentleman." My lady's own maid followed.
Remained much longer. Report, on coming out: "If Sergeant Cuff doesn't
believe a respectable woman, he might keep his opinion to himself, at any
rate!" Penelope went next. Remained only a moment or two. Report, on
coming out: "Sergeant Cuff is much to be pitied. He must have been crossed
in love, father, when he was a young man." The first housemaid followed
Penelope. Remained, like my lady's maid, a long time. Report, on coming
out: "I didn't enter her ladyship's service, Mr. Betteredge, to be doubted
to my face by a low police-officer!" Rosanna Spearman went next. Remained
longer than any of them. No report on coming out—dead silence, and
lips as pale as ashes. Samuel, the footman, followed Rosanna. Remained a
minute or two. Report, on coming out: "Whoever blacks Sergeant Cuff's
boots ought to be ashamed of himself." Nancy, the kitchen-maid, went last.
Remained a minute or two. Report, on coming out: "Sergeant Cuff has a
heart; HE doesn't cut jokes, Mr. Betteredge, with a poor hard-working
girl."</p>
<p>Going into the Court of Justice, when it was all over, to hear if there
were any further commands for me, I found the Sergeant at his old trick—looking
out of window, and whistling "The Last Rose of Summer" to himself.</p>
<p>"Any discoveries, sir?" I inquired.</p>
<p>"If Rosanna Spearman asks leave to go out," said the Sergeant, "let the
poor thing go; but let me know first."</p>
<p>I might as well have held my tongue about Rosanna and Mr. Franklin! It was
plain enough; the unfortunate girl had fallen under Sergeant Cuff's
suspicions, in spite of all I could do to prevent it.</p>
<p>"I hope you don't think Rosanna is concerned in the loss of the Diamond?"
I ventured to say.</p>
<p>The corners of the Sergeant's melancholy mouth curled up, and he looked
hard in my face, just as he had looked in the garden.</p>
<p>"I think I had better not tell you, Mr. Betteredge," he said. "You might
lose your head, you know, for the second time."</p>
<p>I began to doubt whether I had been one too many for the celebrated Cuff,
after all! It was rather a relief to me that we were interrupted here by a
knock at the door, and a message from the cook. Rosanna Spearman HAD asked
to go out, for the usual reason, that her head was bad, and she wanted a
breath of fresh air. At a sign from the Sergeant, I said, Yes. "Which is
the servants' way out?" he asked, when the messenger had gone. I showed
him the servants' way out. "Lock the door of your room," says the
Sergeant; "and if anybody asks for me, say I'm in there, composing my
mind." He curled up again at the corners of the lips, and disappeared.</p>
<p>Left alone, under those circumstances, a devouring curiosity pushed me on
to make some discoveries for myself.</p>
<p>It was plain that Sergeant Cuff's suspicions of Rosanna had been roused by
something that he had found out at his examination of the servants in my
room. Now, the only two servants (excepting Rosanna herself) who had
remained under examination for any length of time, were my lady's own maid
and the first housemaid, those two being also the women who had taken the
lead in persecuting their unfortunate fellow-servant from the first.
Reaching these conclusions, I looked in on them, casually as it might be,
in the servants' hall, and, finding tea going forward, instantly invited
myself to that meal. (For, NOTA BENE, a drop of tea is to a woman's tongue
what a drop of oil is to a wasting lamp.)</p>
<p>My reliance on the tea-pot, as an ally, did not go unrewarded. In less
than half an hour I knew as much as the Sergeant himself.</p>
<p>My lady's maid and the housemaid, had, it appeared, neither of them
believed in Rosanna's illness of the previous day. These two devils—I
ask your pardon; but how else CAN you describe a couple of spiteful women?—had
stolen up-stairs, at intervals during the Thursday afternoon; had tried
Rosanna's door, and found it locked; had knocked, and not been answered;
had listened, and not heard a sound inside. When the girl had come down to
tea, and had been sent up, still out of sorts, to bed again, the two
devils aforesaid had tried her door once more, and found it locked; had
looked at the keyhole, and found it stopped up; had seen a light under the
door at midnight, and had heard the crackling of a fire (a fire in a
servant's bed-room in the month of June!) at four in the morning. All this
they had told Sergeant Cuff, who, in return for their anxiety to enlighten
him, had eyed them with sour and suspicious looks, and had shown them
plainly that he didn't believe either one or the other. Hence, the
unfavourable reports of him which these two women had brought out with
them from the examination. Hence, also (without reckoning the influence of
the tea-pot), their readiness to let their tongues run to any length on
the subject of the Sergeant's ungracious behaviour to them.</p>
<p>Having had some experience of the great Cuff's round-about ways, and
having last seen him evidently bent on following Rosanna privately when
she went out for her walk, it seemed clear to me that he had thought it
unadvisable to let the lady's maid and the housemaid know how materially
they had helped him. They were just the sort of women, if he had treated
their evidence as trustworthy, to have been puffed up by it, and to have
said or done something which would have put Rosanna Spearman on her guard.</p>
<p>I walked out in the fine summer afternoon, very sorry for the poor girl,
and very uneasy in my mind at the turn things had taken. Drifting towards
the shrubbery, some time later, there I met Mr. Franklin. After returning
from seeing his cousin off at the station, he had been with my lady,
holding a long conversation with her. She had told him of Miss Rachel's
unaccountable refusal to let her wardrobe be examined; and had put him in
such low spirits about my young lady that he seemed to shrink from
speaking on the subject. The family temper appeared in his face that
evening, for the first time in my experience of him.</p>
<p>"Well, Betteredge," he said, "how does the atmosphere of mystery and
suspicion in which we are all living now, agree with you? Do you remember
that morning when I first came here with the Moonstone? I wish to God we
had thrown it into the quicksand!"</p>
<p>After breaking out in that way, he abstained from speaking again until he
had composed himself. We walked silently, side by side, for a minute or
two, and then he asked me what had become of Sergeant Cuff. It was
impossible to put Mr. Franklin off with the excuse of the Sergeant being
in my room, composing his mind. I told him exactly what had happened,
mentioning particularly what my lady's maid and the house-maid had said
about Rosanna Spearman.</p>
<p>Mr. Franklin's clear head saw the turn the Sergeant's suspicions had
taken, in the twinkling of an eye.</p>
<p>"Didn't you tell me this morning," he said, "that one of the tradespeople
declared he had met Rosanna yesterday, on the footway to Frizinghall, when
we supposed her to be ill in her room?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"If my aunt's maid and the other woman have spoken the truth, you may
depend upon it the tradesman did meet her. The girl's attack of illness
was a blind to deceive us. She had some guilty reason for going to the
town secretly. The paint-stained dress is a dress of hers; and the fire
heard crackling in her room at four in the morning was a fire lit to
destroy it. Rosanna Spearman has stolen the Diamond. I'll go in directly,
and tell my aunt the turn things have taken."</p>
<p>"Not just yet, if you please, sir," said a melancholy voice behind us.</p>
<p>We both turned about, and found ourselves face to face with Sergeant Cuff.</p>
<p>"Why not just yet?" asked Mr. Franklin.</p>
<p>"Because, sir, if you tell her ladyship, her ladyship will tell Miss
Verinder."</p>
<p>"Suppose she does. What then?" Mr. Franklin said those words with a sudden
heat and vehemence, as if the Sergeant had mortally offended him.</p>
<p>"Do you think it's wise, sir," said Sergeant Cuff, quietly, "to put such a
question as that to me—at such a time as this?"</p>
<p>There was a moment's silence between them: Mr. Franklin walked close up to
the Sergeant. The two looked each other straight in the face. Mr. Franklin
spoke first, dropping his voice as suddenly as he had raised it.</p>
<p>"I suppose you know, Mr. Cuff," he said, "that you are treading on
delicate ground?"</p>
<p>"It isn't the first time, by a good many hundreds, that I find myself
treading on delicate ground," answered the other, as immovable as ever.</p>
<p>"I am to understand that you forbid me to tell my aunt what has happened?"</p>
<p>"You are to understand, if you please, sir, that I throw up the case, if
you tell Lady Verinder, or tell anybody, what has happened, until I give
you leave."</p>
<p>That settled it. Mr. Franklin had no choice but to submit. He turned away
in anger—and left us.</p>
<p>I had stood there listening to them, all in a tremble; not knowing whom to
suspect, or what to think next. In the midst of my confusion, two things,
however, were plain to me. First, that my young lady was, in some
unaccountable manner, at the bottom of the sharp speeches that had passed
between them. Second, that they thoroughly understood each other, without
having previously exchanged a word of explanation on either side.</p>
<p>"Mr. Betteredge," says the Sergeant, "you have done a very foolish thing
in my absence. You have done a little detective business on your own
account. For the future, perhaps you will be so obliging as to do your
detective business along with me."</p>
<p>He took me by the arm, and walked me away with him along the road by which
he had come. I dare say I had deserved his reproof—but I was not
going to help him to set traps for Rosanna Spearman, for all that. Thief
or no thief, legal or not legal, I don't care—I pitied her.</p>
<p>"What do you want of me?" I asked, shaking him off, and stopping short.</p>
<p>"Only a little information about the country round here," said the
Sergeant.</p>
<p>I couldn't well object to improve Sergeant Cuff in his geography.</p>
<p>"Is there any path, in that direction, leading to the sea-beach from this
house?" asked the Sergeant. He pointed, as he spoke, to the fir-plantation
which led to the Shivering Sand.</p>
<p>"Yes," I said, "there is a path."</p>
<p>"Show it to me."</p>
<p>Side by side, in the grey of the summer evening, Sergeant Cuff and I set
forth for the Shivering Sand.</p>
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