Well,
someone has taken the diamond from its hiding place. A number of people know where it was hidden for the night. Can we rule out Rachel herself? She's acting very strange, isn't she? When she turned down Godfrey's proposal, it seemed she was choosing Franklin. (She only has cousins to choose from? What is the rush? When a girl turns 18, she needs to find a husband?) But suddenly she's furious with him. What has happened between them? Wilkie seems to be pointing to Franklin, but he's a little too obvious. Maybe
all of the suspects were in on the disappearance of the diamond in some way.
Have we completely ruled out the Indians? They couldn't have entered the house. Betteredge had checked all the locks - and let those dogs loose! Police Superintendent Seegrave seems to think the servants might have been acting with the Indians.
NOBODY wants to get their hands on that diamond as badly as the Indians do! Hmm... Seegrave is local and knows the people involved, but I am losing confidence in his abilities...just as Franklin is.
I was interested in one of the questions in the heading...
2. What recent event of that time would have made the three Indians particularly sinister to Collins' readers?
Do you have any idea? Was this mentioned - and I forgot? Hoping to find something of the recent relations between the British and the Indians, I came up with this information on the Indian Revolt of 1857, just a few years before Wilkie wrote his novel -
The Sepoy Mutiny was a violent and very bloody uprising against British rule in India in 1857. It is also known by other names: the Indian Mutiny, the Indian Rebellion of 1857, or the Indian Revolt of 1857. During the uprising, women and children were butchered in cold blood and their bodies bodies were flung into a well.
"Never in our history had such a cry for vengeance arisen as when the story of that hideous crime was told."
The mutiny brought the end of the old order. It convinced the government at home that the time had definitely come for ending the old East India Company and transferring the government of India to the Crown."
http://history1800s.about.com/od/thebritishempire/ss/The-Sepoy-Mutiny.htmI'm not sure how this would have figured into WilkieC's story - but perhaps it explains the suspicion that the Indians, if not "jugglers," were persons of interest to the Police...and possibly "sinister" to everyone else... How dangerous do you think they are if unable to retrieve the diamond?