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 thinking of her, taken her picture out of the breast pocket of his tunic.
And then - he'd found out!
It had come about exactly in the way things happened in books. The letter in the wrong envelope.
She'd been writing to them both and she'd put her letter to Richmond in the envelope addressed to her husband.
Even now, all these years later, he could feel the shock of it - the pain... God, it had hurt!
And the business had been going on some time.
The letter made that clear.
Week-ends!
Richmond's last leave... Leslie - Leslie and Arthur! God damn the fellow!
Damn his smiling face, his brisk
"Yes, sir."
Liar and hypocrite!
Stealer of another man's wife!
It had gathered slowly - that cold murderous rage.
He'd managed to carry on as usual - to show nothing. He'd tried to make his manner to Richmond just the same.
Had he succeeded?
He thought so.
Richmond hadn't suspected.
Inequalities of temper were easily accounted for out there, where men's nerves were continually snapping under the strain.
Only young Armitage had looked at him curiously once or twice.
Quite a young chap, but he'd had perceptions, that boy.