[The Mystery of the Hasty Arrow by Anna Katharine Green]@TWC D-Link book
The Mystery of the Hasty Arrow

BOOK IV
57/170

I will merely halt for the moment your attempts in my direction, by asking, what have you or anybody else ever seen in me to think I would practise my old-time skill on a young and beautiful stranger enjoying herself in a place so dear to my heart as the museum of which I have been a director now these many years?
Am I a madman, or a destroyer of youth?
I love the young.

This inhuman death of one so fair and innocent has whitened my locks and seared my very heart-strings.

I shall never get over it; and whatever evidence you may have or think you have, of my having handled bow and arrow in that museum gallery, it must fall before the fact of my natural incapability to do the thing with which you have charged me.

No act possible to man is more in contradiction to my instincts, than the wanton or even casual killing of a young girl." "I believe you." It was the Inspector who spoke, and the emphasis which he gave to his words lifted the director's head again into its old self-reliant poise.
But the silence which followed was so weighted with possibilities of something yet to be said by this portentous holder of secrets, that it caused the nobly lifted head slowly to droop again and the lips which had opened impulsively to close.
Were the words coming--the words which might at a stroke pull down the whole fabric of his life, past, present and to come?
In his excited state of mind he seemed already to hear them.

Doom was in their sound, and the world, once so bright, was growing dark about him--dark! Yet how could these men know?
And if they did why did they not speak?
And they did not; they did not.


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