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No one answered her. They were all too intent on what would be disclosed when those paper folds should be turned back.
"It looks just like--just like--pshaw! I know I've seen packages just like that before, somewhere," said Will. "But I can't, for the life of me, think where it was."
"Was it in a jeweler's window?" asked Amy, in a low voice, from where she stood beside him.
"That's it, little girl! You've struck it!" Will cried, and impulsively he held out his hand, which Amy clasped, blus.h.i.+ng the while.
"What's that talk about a jeweler's?" asked Allen.
But no one answered him.
For, at that moment Betty had folded back the white paper, and there to the gaze of all, flas.h.i.+ng in the sun which glinted in through an open window, lay a ma.s.s of sparkling stones. Thousands of points of light seemed to reflect from them. They seemed to be a mult.i.tude of dewdrops shaken from the depths of some big rose, and dropped into the midst of a rainbow.
"Oh!" cried Betty, shrinking back. "Oh!" She could say no more.
"Look!" whispered Grace, and her voice was hoa.r.s.e.
"Well, I'll be jiggered!" gasped Will.
"Diamonds!" cried Allen. "Betty, you've discovered a fortune in diamonds!"
"Diamonds?" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Amy, and her voice was a questioning one.
Then there came a silence while they all looked at the flas.h.i.+ng heap of stones--there really was a little heap of them.
"Can they really be diamonds?" asked Betty, finding her voice at last.
Allen reached over her shoulder and picked up one of the larger stones.
He held it to the light, touched it to the tip of his tongue, rubbed it with his fingers and laid it back. He did the same thing with two others.
"Well?" asked Will, at length. "What's the verdict?"
"I'm no expert, of course," Allen said, slowly, and he seemed to have difficulty in breathing, "but I really think they are diamonds."
"Diamonds? All those?" cried Mollie. "Why, they must be worth--millions!"
They all laughed at that. It seemed a relief from the strain, and to break the spell that hung over them all.
"Hardly millions," spoke Allen, "but if they are really diamonds they will run well up into the thousands."
"But are they really diamonds?" asked Betty.
"As I said, I'm no expert," Allen repeated, "but a jeweler once told me several ways of testing diamonds, and these answer to all those tests.
Of course it wouldn't be safe to take my word. We should have a jeweler look at these right away."
"I knew I had seen paper like that before," Will said. "It's just the kind you see loose diamonds displayed in around holiday times in jewelers' windows."
"That doesn't make these diamonds, just because they are in the proper kind of paper," scoffed Roy. "I think they're only moonstones."
"Moonstones aren't that color at all," declared Henry. "They are sort of a smoky shade."
"I guess Roy means rhinestones," said Amy, with a smile.
"That's it," he agreed. "They're only fakes. Who would leave a lot of diamonds like that in a box in the sand?"
"No one would leave them there purposely, to lose them," said Allen.
"But I think we've stumbled on a bigger mystery here than we dreamed of.
I am sure these are diamonds!"
"I--I'm afraid to hope so," said Betty, with a little laugh.
"Well, it's easy to tell," Allen said. "There's a jeweler in town. He probably doesn't handle many diamonds, but he ought to be able to tell a real one from a false. Let's take one of the smaller stones and ask him what he thinks."
"Oh, yes, let's find out--and as soon as we can!" cried Grace. "Isn't it just--delicious!"
"Delicious!" scoffed Will. "You'd think she was speaking of--chocolates!"
CHAPTER XIV
SEEKING CLUES
The first shock of the discovery over (and it was a shock to them all, boys included), the young folks began to examine the stones more calmly.
They spoke of them as diamonds, and hoped they would prove to be stones of value, and not mere imitations.
There were several of fairly large size, and others much smaller; some, according to Allen, of only a sixteenth-karat in weight.
"But stones of even that small size may be very valuable if they are pure and well cut," he said.
"And what would be the value of the largest ones?" asked Betty, for there were one or two stones that Will was sure were three or four karats in size.
"I'd be afraid to guess," Allen said. "We'd better have them valued."
The girls handled the stones, holding them on their fingers and trying to imagine how they would look set in rings.
"Engagement rings?" asked Grace of Betty, who had suggested that.
"Silly! I didn't say anything of the kind!"
"Well, it isn't what you say, it's what you mean."
It did not seem they could look at the stones enough. Every specimen was examined again and again, held up to the light, and turned this way and that in the sun so that the sparkle might be increased.
"Well, I suppose we might as well put them away," said Betty, with a sigh, after a while. "It's no use wis.h.i.+ng----"
"Wis.h.i.+ng what?" demanded Mollie, quickly.