“ ‘No matter,’ observed Caderousse, replacing the box in his pocket, ‘someone else will purchase it.’
“ ‘Yes,’ continued the jeweller; ‘but someone else will not be so easy as I am, or content himself with the same story. It is not natural that a man like you should possess such a diamond. He will inform against you. You will have to find the Abbé Busoni; and abbés who give diamonds worth two thousand louis are rare. The law would seize it, and put you in prison; if at the end of three or four months you are set at liberty, the ring will be lost, or a false stone, worth three francs, will be given you, instead of a diamond worth 50,000 or perhaps 55,000 francs; from which you must allow that one runs considerable risk in purchasing.’
“Caderousse and his wife looked eagerly at each other.
“ ‘No,’ said Caderousse, ‘we are not rich enough to lose 5,000 francs.’