But alarm for whose safety? Mark's, obviously.
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Robert is a stranger; Mark is an intimate friend.
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Robert has written a letter that morning, the letter of a man in a dangerous temper.
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Robert is the tough customer; Mark the highly civilized gentleman.
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If there has been a quarrel, it is Robert who has shot Mark.
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He bangs at the door again.
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Of course, to Antony, coming suddenly upon this scene, Cayley's conduct had seemed rather absurd, but then, just for the moment, Cayley had lost his head.
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Anybody else might have done the same.
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But, as soon as Antony suggested trying the windows, Cayley saw that that was the obvious thing to do.
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So he leads the way to the windows-the longest way.
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Why? To give the murderer time to escape? If he had thought then that Mark was the murderer, perhaps, yes.
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But he thinks that Robert is the murderer.
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If he is not hiding anything, he must think so.
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Indeed he says so, when he sees the body; "I was afraid it was Mark," he says, when he finds that it is Robert who is killed.
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No reason, then, for wishing to gain time.
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On the contrary, every instinct would urge him to get into the room as quickly as possible, and seize the wicked Robert.
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Yet he goes the longest way round.
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Why? And then, why run?
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"That's the question," said Antony to himself, as he filled his pipe, "and bless me if I know the answer.
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It may be, of course, that Cayley is just a coward.
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He was in no hurry to get close to Robert's revolver, and yet wanted me to think that he was bursting with eagerness.
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That would explain it, but then that makes Cayley out a coward.
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Is he? At any rate he pushed his face up against the window bravely enough.
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No, I want a better answer than that."
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