"Well, Betty and I knew; in fact, I'd told her-Miss Norris I mean-not to be a silly ass. Knowing Mark. Mrs. Calladine wasn't there-Betty wouldn't let her be. As for the Major, I don't believe anything would frighten him."
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"Where did the ghost appear?"
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"Down by the bowling-green. That's supposed to be its haunt, you know. We were all down there in the moonlight, pretending to wait for it. Do you know the bowling-green?"
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"I'll show it to you after dinner."
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"I wish you would.... Was Mark very angry afterwards?"
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"Oh, Lord, yes. Sulked for a whole day. Well, he's just like that."
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"Was he angry with all of you?"
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"Oh, yes sulky, you know."
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"This morning?"
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"Oh, no. He got over it-he generally does. He's just like a child. That's really it, Tony; he's like a child in some ways. As a matter of fact, he was unusually bucked with himself this morning. And yesterday."
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"Yesterday?"
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"Rather. We all said we'd never seen him in such form."
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"Is he generally in form?"
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"He's quite good company, you know, if you take him the right way. He's rather vain and childish well, like I've been telling you and self-important; but quite amusing in his way, and-" Bill broke off suddenly. "I say, you know, it really is the limit, talking about your host like this."
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"Don't think of him as your host. Think of him as a suspected murderer with a warrant out against him."
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"Oh! but that's all rot, you know."
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"It's the fact, Bill."
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"Yes, but I mean, he didn't do it. He wouldn't murder anybody. It's a funny thing to say, but well, he's not big enough for it. He's got his faults, like all of us, but they aren't on that scale."
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"One can kill anybody in a childish fit of temper."
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Bill grunted assent, but without prejudice to Mark. "All the same," he said, "I can't believe it. That he would do it deliberately, I mean."
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"Suppose it was an accident, as Cayley says, would he lose his head and run away?"
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Bill considered for a moment.
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"Yes, I really think he might, you know. He nearly ran away when he saw the ghost. Of course, that's different, rather."
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"Oh, I don't know. In each case it's a question of obeying your instinct instead of your reason."
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