Page:Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes - The Lodger.djvu/133

Rh "Why, Ellen, don’t you feel well?" asked Bunting quickly.

"Just a spasm, a sharp stitch in my side, like," answered the poor woman heavily. "It’s over now. Don’t mind me."

"But I don’t believe—no, that I don’t—that there’s anybody in the world who knows who The Avenger is," went on Chandler quickly. "It stands to reason that anybody’d give him up—in their own interest, if not in anyone else’s. Who’d shelter such a creature? Why, ’twould be dangerous to have him in the house along with one!"

"Then it’s your idea that he’s not responsible for the wicked things he does?" Mrs. Bunting raised her head, and looked over at Chandler with eager, anxious eyes.

"I’d be sorry to think he wasn’t responsible enough to hang!" said Chandler deliberately. "After all the trouble he’s been giving us, too!"

"Hanging’d be too good for that chap," said Bunting.

"Not if he’s not responsible," said his wife sharply. "I never heard of anything so cruel—that I never did! If the man’s a madman, he ought to be in an asylum—that’s where he ought to be."

"Hark to her now!" Bunting looked at his Ellen with amusement. "Contrary isn’t the word for her! But there, I’ve noticed the last few days that she seemed to be taking that monster’s part. That’s what comes of being a born total abstainer."

Mrs. Bunting had got up from her chair. "What nonsense you do talk!" she said angrily. "Not but what it’s a good thing if these murders have emptied the