to him:
“Is your wife all right?”
“I'll go and see, sir.”
He returned a minute or two later.
“Sleeping beautiful, she is.”
“Good,” said the doctor. “Don't disturb her.”
“No, sir. I'll just put things straight in the dining-room and make sure everything's locked up right, and then I'll turn in.”
He went across the hall into the dining-room.
The others went upstairs, a slow unwilling procession.
If this had been an old house, with creaking wood, and dark shadows, and heavily panelled walls, there might have been an eerie feeling. But this house was the essence of modernity. There were no dark corners - no possible sliding panels - it was flooded with electric light - everything was new and bright and shining. There was nothing hidden in this house, nothing concealed. It had no atmosphere about it.
Somehow, that was the most frightening thing of all...
They exchanged good-nights on the upper landing. Each of them went into his or her own room, and each of them automatically, almost without conscious thought, locked the door...
III
In his pleasant softly tinted room, Mr. Justice Wargrave removed his garments and prepared himself for bed.
He was thinking about Edward Seton.
He remembered Seton very well. His fair hair, his blue eyes, his habit of looking you straight in the face with a pleasant air of straightforwardness. That was what had made so good an impression on the jury.
Llewellyn, for the Crown, had bungled it a bit. He had been over-vehement, had tried to prove too much.
Matthews, on the other hand, for the Defence, had been good. His points had told. His cross-examinations had been deadly. His handling of his client in the witness box had been masterly.
And Seton had come through the ordeal of cross-examination well. He had not got excited or over-vehement. The jury had been impressed. It had seemed to Matthews, perhaps, as though everything had been over bar the shouting.
The judge wound up his watch carefully and placed it by the bed.
He remembered exactly how he had felt sitting there - listening, making notes, appreciating everything, tabulating every scrap of evidence that told against the prisoner.
He'd enjoyed that case! Matthews' final speech had been first-class. Llewellyn, coming after it, had failed to remove the good impression that the defending counsel had made.
And then had come his own summing up...
Carefully, Mr. Justice Wargrave removed his false teeth and dropped them into a glass of water. The shrunken lips fell in. It was a cruel mouth now, cruel and predatory.
Hooding his eyes, the judge smiled to himself.
He'd cooked Seton's goose all right!
With a slightly rheumatic grunt, he climbed into bed and turned out the electric light.
IV
Downstairs in the dining-room, Rogers stood puzzled.
He was staring at the china figures in the centre of the table.
He muttered to himself:
“That's a rum go! I could have sworn there were ten of them.”
V
General Macarthur tossed from side to side.
Sleep would not come to him.
In the darkness he kept seeing Arthur Richmond's face.
He'd liked Arthur - he'd been damned fond of Arthur. He'd been pleased that Leslie liked him too.
Leslie was so capricious. Lots of good fellows that Leslie would turn up her nose at and pronounce dull. “Dull!” Just like that.
But she hadn't found Arthur Richmond dull. They'd got on well together from the beginning. They'd talked of plays and music and pictures together. She'd teased him, made fun of him, ragged him. And he, Macarthur, had been delighted at the thought that Leslie took quite a motherly interest in the boy.
Motherly indeed! Damn fool not to remember that Richmond was twenty-eight to Leslie's twenty-nine.
He'd loved Leslie. He could see her now. Her heart-shaped face, and her dancing deep grey eyes, and the brown curling mass of her hair. He'd loved Leslie and he'd believed in her absolutely.
Out there in France, in the middle of all the hell of it, he'd sat
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