[Dead Men’s Money by J. S. Fletcher]@TWC D-Link bookDead Men’s Money CHAPTER XIII 8/12
And he made a very fine and elegant figure as he sat there in his grand evening clothes, and I was puzzled to know which struck me most--the fact that he was what he was, the seventh baronet and head of an old family, or the familiar, easy, good-natured fashion which he treated me, and talked to me, as if I had been a man of his own rank. I had determined what to do as I sat waiting him; and now that he had bidden me to speak, I told him the whole story from start to finish, beginning with Gilverthwaite and ending with Crone, and sparing no detail or explanation of my own conduct.
He listened in silence, and with more intentness and watchfulness than I had ever seen a man show in my life, and now and then he nodded and sometimes smiled; and when I had made an end he put a sharp question. "So--beyond Crone--who, I hear, is dead--you've never told a living soul of this ?" he asked, eyeing me closely. "Not one, Sir Gilbert," I assured him.
"Not even--" "Not even--who ?" he inquired quickly. "Not even my own sweetheart," I said.
"And it's the first secret ever I kept from her." He smiled at that, and gave me a quick look as if he were trying to get a fuller idea of me. "Well," he said, "and you did right.
Not that I should care two pins, Mr. Moneylaws, if you'd told all this out at the inquest.
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