receive no more attentions 
from Mr. Palmer. He--is the son of the gentleman whom I expect to 
marry, and I have no intention of allowing my seamstress to angle for 
my future step-son." 
"Madame--" began Mona, indignantly. 
"We will not discuss the matter further," Mrs. Montague interposed, 
imperiously; "you can go now, but be sure to have my traveling dress 
ready by nine o'clock in the morning." 
Mona went out, and forced herself to shut the door after her without 
making the slightest sound, although every nerve in her body was 
tingling with indignation and resentment, to which she longed to give 
some outward expression. 
But for one thing, she would have faced the coarse, rude woman, and
proclaimed that she was already the promised wife of Raymond Palmer, 
and had a perfect right to receive his attentions whenever and wherever 
she chose. 
That secret of the desertion of her mother haunted her, however, and 
she was bound to curb herself and bear everything for three months 
longer, while she would diligently apply herself to the task before her. 
She retired immediately, but she could not go to sleep until she had 
relieved her overcharged heart of its bitterness and passion in a burst of 
weeping. 
The next morning early Ray and his father were on their way to New 
York, and ten o'clock found them seated in the private court-room, 
where Mrs. Vanderheck was to answer the charges against her. 
Money will accomplish a great deal, and in this case it had secured the 
privilege of a private examination, before a police justice, who would 
decide whether the suspected culprit should be held for the grand jury. 
Immediately upon the arrival of the Palmers, Detective Rider came to 
them, accompanied by a gentleman whom he introduced as Justin 
Cutler, Esq., of Chicago. 
They all took seats together, and presently a door opened to admit Mrs. 
Vanderheck, who was attended by her husband and counsel, and who 
was richly attired in a close-fitting black velvet robe, and wore 
magnificent solitaires in her ears, besides a cluster of blazing stones at 
her throat. 
If she was the adventuress whom the officials were searching for, she 
was certainly bringing a bold front to the contest in thus parading her 
booty before their very eyes. 
Her husband was an elderly gentleman, who appeared to be in feeble 
health, but who conducted himself with dignity and self-possession. 
The case was opened by Mr. Cutler's counsel, who told the story of the
purchase of the spurious crescents in Chicago, and affirmed that they 
had been found upon the person of the party under arrest. 
Mrs. Vanderheck listened with intense interest throughout the recital, 
while a look of astonishment overspread her face as the narrative 
proceeded. 
The crescents were produced and Mr. Cutler brought forth the bogus 
ones, which he still had in his possession, and the two pairs appeared to 
be exact counterparts of each other. 
The magistrate examined them with interest and care, after which he 
placed them on the desk before him. 
Mrs. Vanderheck's counsel then said that his client would like to relate 
how the contested jewels came in her possession. 
Permission being given for her to do so, the lady took the stand and 
began: 
"Three years ago the coming month, which, according to the dates just 
given by the prosecuting counsel, was about three months after the 
gentleman in Chicago was defrauded, I was boarding at the Revere 
House, in Boston. While there I became acquainted with a lady--a 
widow who called herself Mrs. Bent, and her appearance corresponds 
with the description given of Mrs. Bently. I was very much pleased 
with her, for she seemed to be a lady of very amiable character, and we 
became quite intimate. She appeared to have abundant means, spent her 
money very freely, and wore several diamonds of great beauty and 
value--among them the crescents which were taken from me last Friday 
evening. About two months after becoming acquainted with her, she 
came to me one day in great distress and said that the bank, in which 
she was a large stockholder, had suspended payment, and all her 
available funds were locked up in it. She said she had considerable 
money invested in Western land, which she might be able to turn into 
cash later, but until she could do so she would be absolutely 
penniless--she had not even enough ready money to defray her hotel 
bill, which had been presented that day. Then with apparent reluctance
and confusion she remarked that she had often heard me admire her 
diamond crescents, and so she had ventured to come and ask me if I 
would purchase them and thus relieve her in her present extremity, 
while she offered them at a price which I considered a great    
    
		
	
	
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