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For a minute or two Mr. Latham sat perfectly still, gazing into the other's eyes. First he was startled, then this gave way to incredulity, and at last he shook his head.
"No," he said flatly. "No."
"Laadham, ve Amerigans produce anyding," the German went on patiently. "In eighdeen hundred und forty-eight ve didn't know California vas full of gold; und so late as eighdeen hundred und ninedy-four ve didn't know der Klondike vas full of gold. Der greadest diamond fields ve know now are in Africa, bud in eighdeen hundred und sixty-six ve didn't know _id_! Dere iss no reason ve should _nod_ produce diamonds."
"But look here, Schultze," Mr. Latham expostulated, "it's--it's unheard of."
"So vas der Mizzizzippi River until id was discovered," the German argued complacently. "You are a diamond dealer, Laadham, bud you don'd know much aboud dem from whey dey come at. Iss Czenki here?
Send for him. He knows more aboud diamonds as any man vat ever lived."
Mr. Latham sent an office boy for Czenki, who a few minutes later appeared with an inquiry in his beady black eyes and a nod of recognition for Mr. Schultze.
"Sid down, Mr. Czenki," the German invited. "Sid down und draw a long breath, und den dell Mr. Laadham here someding aboud diamonds."
"What is it, please?" Mr. Czenki asked of Mr. Latham.
"Mr. Czenki, have you any very definite idea as to where those diamonds came from?" asked Mr. Latham.
"No," was the unhesitating response.
"Is it possible that they might have been found in the--in the United States?" Mr. Latham went on.
"Certainly. They might have been found anywhere."
"As a matter of fact, were any diamonds _ever_ found in the United States?"
"Yes, frequently. One very large diamond was found in 1855 at Manchester, across the James River from Richmond, Virginia. It weighed twenty-four carats when cut, and is the largest, I believe, ever found in this country."
Mr. Latham seemed surprised.
"Why, you astonish me," he remarked.
"Vait a minute und he'll astonish you some more," Mr. Schultze put in confidently. "Vere else in der United States haf diamonds been found, Czenki?"
"In California, in North Carolina, and in Hall County, Georgia,"
replied the expert readily. "There is good ground for the belief that the stone found at Richmond had been washed down from the mountains farther in the interior, and, if this is true, there is a substantial basis for the scientific hypothesis that diamond fields lie somewhere in the Appalachian Range, because the diamonds found in both North Carolina and Georgia were adjacent to these mountains."
He paused a moment. "This is all a matter of record."
His employer was leaning forward in his chair, gripping the arms fiercely as he stared at him.
"Do you believe it possible, Mr. Czenki," he asked deliberately, "that Mr. Wynne has found these diamond fields?"
The expert shrugged his slender shoulders.
"It is possible, of course," he replied. "From time to time great sums of money have been spent in searching for them, so--" He waved his hand and was silent.
"Zo you see, Laadham," Mr. Schultze interpolated, "ve don'd know anyding much. Ve _know_ der African fields, und der Australian fields, und der Brazilian fields, und der fields in India, bud ve _don'd_ know if new fields haf been found. By der time you haf lived so long as me you won't know any more as I do."
There was silence for a long time. Mr. Czenki sat with impa.s.sive face, and his hands at rest on the arms of the chair. At last he spoke:
"If you'll pardon me, Mr. Latham, I may suggest another possibility."
"_Vas iss?_" demanded Mr. Schultze quickly.
"Did you ever hear of the French scientist, Charles Friedel?" Mr.
Czenki asked, addressing Mr. Latham.
"Never, no."
"Well, this idea has occurred to me. Some years ago he discovered two or three small diamonds in a meteor. We may safely a.s.sume, from the fact that there were diamonds in one meteor, that there may be diamonds in other meteors, therefore--"
The German importer antic.i.p.ated his line of thought and arose with a guttural burst of Teutonic expletives.
"Therefore," the expert went on steadily, "is it not possible that Mr. Wynne has stumbled upon a huge deposit of diamonds in some meteoric substance some place in this country? A meteor may have fallen anywhere, of course, and it may have been only two months ago, or it may have been two thousand years ago. It may even be buried in his cellar."
The huge German nodded his head vigorously, with sparkling eyes.
"It seems extremely probable that if diamond fields had been discovered in the Appalachian Range," Mr. Czenki went on, "it would have become public in spite of every effort to prevent it; whereas, it is possible that a meteor containing diamonds might have been hidden away easily; and, also, the production of diamonds from such a source in this country would not make it necessary for the diamonds to pa.s.s through the Custom House. Is it clear, sir?"
"Why, it's absurd, fantastic, chimerical!" Mr. Latham burst out irritably. "It's ridiculous to consider such a thing."
"I beg your pardon," Mr. Czenki apologized. "It is only a conjecture, of course. I may add that I don't believe that three stones of the size of the replicas which Mr. Wynne produced here could have been found anywhere in the world and brought in here-- smuggled in or in the usual way--and the secret held against the thousands of men who daily watch the diamond fields and market. It would not be difficult, however, if one man alone knew the source of the stones, to keep it from the world at large. I beg your pardon,"
he added.
He arose as if to go. Mr. Schultze brought a heavy hand down on the slim shoulder of the expert, and turned to Mr. Latham.
"Laadham, you are listening to der man who knows more as all of us pud in a crowd," he declared. "_Mein Gott_, I do believe he's right!"
Mr. Latham was a cold, unimaginative man of business; he hadn't even believed in fairies when he was a boy. This was child-talk; he permitted himself to express his opinion by a jerk of his head, and was silent. Diamonds like those out of meteors! Bos.h.!.+
CHAPTER IX
AND MORE DIAMONDS!
There was a rap on the door, and a clerk thrust his head in.
"Mr. Birnes to see you, sir," he announced.
"Show him in," directed Mr. Latham. "Sit down, both of you, and let's see what he has to say."
There was an odd expression of hope deferred on the detective's face when he entered. He glanced inquiringly at Mr. Schultze and Mr. Czenki, whereupon Mr. Latham introduced them.
"You may talk freely," he added. "We are all interested alike."
The detective crossed his legs and balanced his hat carefully on a knee, the while he favored Mr. Czenki with a sharp scrutiny. There was that in the thin, scarred face and in the beady black eyes which inevitably drew the attention of a stranger, and half a dozen times as he talked Mr. Birnes glanced at the expert.
He retold the story of the cab ride up Fifth Avenue, and the car trip back downtown--omitting embarra.s.sing details such as the finding of two notes addressed to himself--dwelt a moment upon the empty gripsack which Mr. Wynne carried on the car, and then: