Page:Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes - The Lodger.djvu/212

Rh, and, leading her to one of the benches that stood out from the whitewashed walls—"unless you’d rather be with the witnesses, that is."

But again she said, "Oh, no!" And then, with an effort, "Oughtn’t I to go into the court now, if it’s likely to be so full?"

"Don’t you worry," he said kindly. "I’ll see you get a proper place. I must leave you now for a minute, but I’ll come back in good time and look after you."

She raised the thick veil she had pulled down over her face while they were going through that sinister, wolfish-looking crowd outside, and looked about her.

Many of the gentlemen—they mostly wore tall hats and good overcoats—standing round and about her looked vaguely familiar. She picked out one at once. He was a famous journalist, whose shrewd, animated face was familiar to her owing to the fact that it was widely advertised in connection with a preparation for the hair—a preparation which in happier, more prosperous days Bunting had had great faith in, and used, or so he always said, with great benefit to himself. This gentleman was the centre of an eager circle; half a dozen men were talking to him, listening deferentially when he spoke, and each of these men, so Mrs. Bunting realised, was a Somebody.

How strange, how amazing, to reflect that from all parts of London, from their doubtless important avocations, one unseen, mysterious beckoner had brought all these men here together, to this sordid place, on this bitterly cold, dreary day. Here they were, all thinking of, talking of, evoking one unknown, mysterious