The Bride's Diamonds
Clever Detective Work Performed by the Jeweler's Daughter
Diamonds big and bright—unset diamonds that shone and gleamed and changed to all manner of colors as Mr. Mulford moved the velvet tray about before his customers.
They were sitting at a table in the little room at the back of the store, the jeweler and rich Mr. and Mrs. Carberry. Mr. Carberry had bought his wife’s wedding-ring of Mr. Mulford the day he opened the store twenty-five years before, and had been a regular customer ever since, and a successful broker may be a very good customer indeed.
As for the store, it was much finer than it was in those days. It had larger windows and better stock—more carriages stopped before the door. Neither of the men had any thing to complain of as far as fortune went.
“Well,” said Mr. Carberry at last, “I think we’ve settled the matter. The stones are chosen and the settings selected, and I fancy Bessy will have as pretty a wedding-present as need be. We want to please her; she has pleased us, and daughters don’t always do that.”
“No. they do not, Mr. Carberry,” said Mr. Mulford, with a little sigh.
“You don’t mean that your little girl—” began Mr. Carberry, and stopped short with: “I beg your pardon.”
“Oh, no excuse,” said Mulford, blandly. “You’ve known my Esther since she was a baby and you know she has no mother to advise her. Esther is a dear girl, but I had ambitions for her. I wanted her to marry well— there was young Vinton; why, he went wild over her.”“Any man might,” said Carberry, “I always think of the Turkish saying: ‘She must be a jeweler’s daughter, for she has… Read More