Part 5 (1/2)
”Some of the windows were, of course, open. What of the doors?”
”The front door and that to the side piazza were locked. The back door was open.”
”Then a person might have sneaked in by the back way?”
”I presume so.”
”Your father was quite dead when you found him?” asked the detective quickly.
”I--I--thought so.” The girl began to choke up and sob. ”It--it was such a shock--I--I--” She could not go on.
Adam Adams watched her keenly and noted how she trembled from head to foot.
”Do not take it so hard, Margaret,” put in Raymond Case, placing his hand upon her shoulder. ”It will all come out right in the end--I am sure of it.”
”But it will not bring back my father!” sobbed the girl. ”And he was so dear to me! And to think that we should quarrel at all--”
”The quarrel took place at the breakfast table, so you said,” came from Adam Adams. ”And you rushed out to get away from what your stepmother was saying to you?”
”Yes. I could not bear it any longer.”
”Your father took Mrs. Langmore's part?”
”He did, but at the same time he told her not to be so hard on me--that I had been without a mother to guide me so many years, and all that.”
”Do you think they quarreled between themselves after you left, or after your father came back from the bank?”
”I cannot say as to that.”
”Mr. Adams has an idea that possibly one or the other of them was responsible,” put in Raymond. ”He thinks one might have killed the other and then committed suicide.”
”I do not think so. I said it was possible,” corrected the detective.
”In taking up an affair of this sort one must look at it from all sides.”
”I do not believe my father either killed her or committed suicide,”
answered Margaret Langmore firmly.
”Do you think Mrs. Langmore would act in such a fas.h.i.+on?”
The girl pondered for a moment.
”Honestly I do not. She may have killed my father, but if so she would have run away.”
”The safe was closed at the time of the tragedy?”
”Yes.”
”And absolutely nothing was stolen?”