The Triumphs of Eugène Valmont | Page 3

Robert Barr
metal,
whereupon blood poisoning set in, and although his life was saved, he was dismissed
from the hospital with his right arm gone and his usefulness destroyed.
When the jeweller Boehmer made the necklace he asked a hundred and sixty thousand
pounds for it, but after years of disappointment he was content to sell it to Cardinal de
Rohan for sixty-four thousand pounds, to be liquidated in three instalments, not one of
which was ever paid. This latter amount was probably somewhere near the value of the
five hundred and sixteen separate stones, one of which was of tremendous size, a very

monarch of diamonds, holding its court among seventeen brilliants each as large as a
filbert. This iridescent concentration of wealth was, as one might say, placed in my care,
and I had to see to it that no harm came to the necklace or to its prospective owner until
they were safely across the boundaries of France.
The four weeks previous to the thirteenth proved a busy and anxious time for me.
Thousands, most of whom were actuated by mere curiosity, wished to view the diamonds.
We were compelled to discriminate, and sometimes discriminated against the wrong
person, which caused unpleasantness. Three distinct attempts were made to rob the safe,
but luckily these criminal efforts were frustrated, and so we came unscathed to the
eventful thirteenth of the month.
The sale was to begin at two o'clock, and on the morning of that day I took the somewhat
tyrannical precaution of having the more dangerous of our own malefactors, and as many
of the foreign thieves as I could trump up charges against, laid by the heels, yet I knew
very well it was not these rascals I had most to fear, but the suave, well-groomed
gentlemen, amply supplied with unimpeachable credentials, stopping at our fine hotels
and living like princes. Many of these were foreigners against whom we could prove
nothing, and whose arrest might land us into temporary international difficulties.
Nevertheless, I had each of them shadowed, and on the morning of the thirteenth if one of
them had even disputed a cab fare I should have had him in prison half an hour later, and
taken the consequences, but these gentlemen are very shrewd and do not commit
mistakes.
I made up a list of all the men in the world who were able or likely to purchase the
necklace. Many of them would not be present in person at the auction rooms; their
bidding would be done by agents. This simplified matters a good deal, for the agents kept
me duly informed of their purposes, and, besides, an agent who handles treasure every
week is an adept at the business, and does not need the protection which must surround
an amateur, who in nine cases out of ten has but scant idea of the dangers that threaten
him, beyond knowing that if he goes down a dark street in a dangerous quarter he is
likely to be maltreated and robbed.
There were no less than sixteen clients all told, whom we learned were to attend
personally on the day of the sale, any one of whom might well have made the purchase.
The Marquis of Warlingham and Lord Oxtead from England were well-known jewel
fanciers, while at least half a dozen millionaires were expected from the United States,
with a smattering from Germany, Austria, and Russia, and one each from Italy, Belgium,
and Holland.
Admission to the auction rooms was allowed by ticket only, to be applied for at least a
week in advance, applications to be accompanied by satisfactory testimonials. It would
possibly have surprised many of the rich men collected there to know that they sat cheek
by jowl with some of the most noted thieves of England and America, but I allowed this
for two reasons: first, I wished to keep these sharpers under my own eye until I knew who
had bought the necklace; and, secondly, I was desirous that they should not know they
were suspected.

I stationed trusty men outside on the Boulevard des Italians, each of whom knew by sight
most of the probable purchasers of the necklace. It was arranged that when the sale was
over I should walk out to the boulevard alongside the man who was the new owner of the
diamonds, and from that moment until he quitted France my men were not to lose sight of
him if he took personal custody of the stones, instead of doing the sensible and proper
thing of having them insured and forwarded to his residence by some responsible transit
company, or depositing them in the bank. In fact, I took every precaution that occurred to
me. All police Paris was on the qui vive, and felt itself
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 117
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.