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News from the Duchy by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
page 58 of 243 (23%)
"His fingers felt around to the clasps. One by one he detached the
necklaces and slipped them into his trousers' pocket.

"He also managed to pull off one of the rings; but found this a more
difficult matter, because the fingers were swollen somewhat with the
salt water. So he contented himself with one, and ran back to the
lighthouse to give the alarm to his comrades.

"When his comrades saw the body there was great outcry upon the
jewels on its fingers; but none attempted to disturb them, and Lucien
kept his own counsel. They carried the poor thing to a store-chamber
at the base of the lighthouse, and there before nightfall they had
collected close upon thirty bodies. There was much talk in the
newspapers afterwards concerning the honesty of our poor Bretons, who
pillaged none of the dead, but gave up whatever they found.
The relatives and the great shipping company subscribed a fund, of
which a certain small portion came even to Ile Lezan to be
administered by me.

"The poor lady with the necklaces? If you read the accounts in the
newspapers, as no doubt you did, you will already have guessed her
name. Yes, in truth, she was your great soprano, whom they called
Madame Chiara, or La Chiara: so modest are you English, at least in
all that concerns the arts, that when an incomparable singer is born
to you she must go to Italy to borrow a name. She was returning from
South Africa, where the finest of the three necklaces had been
presented to her by subscription amongst her admirers. They say her
voice so ravished the audiences at Johannesburg and Pretoria that she
might almost, had she willed, have carried home the great diamond
they are sending to your King. But that, no doubt, was an invention
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