[The Zeit-Geist by Lily Dougall]@TWC D-Link bookThe Zeit-Geist CHAPTER XII 6/10
No thought that came to her was satisfactory.
What had Bart done? Why had his form seemed to her so inextricably confused with the form of her father at the moment of the apparition? The recognition of a man or his garments, although the result of observation, does not usually carry with it any consciousness of the details that we have observed; and she did not know now what it was that had made her think of Toyner so strongly. The next morning, as the day was beginning to wear on, one of the Fentown men put his head into Ann's door. "Do you happen to know where Toyner is ?" he asked. She gave a negative, only to be obliged to repeat it to several questions in quick succession. "Seen him this morning ?" "Seen him last night ?" "Happen to know where he would likely be ?" The growing feeling of distress in Ann's mind made the shake of her head more and more emphatic.
She was of course an object of more or less pity to every one at that time, and the intruder made an explanation that had some tone of apology. "Oh, well, I didn't know but as you might have happened to have seen him since he came back.
His boat's there at the landing all right, but his mother's not seen him up to the house." During the day Ann heard the same tale in several different forms. Toyner was one of those quiet men not often in request by his neighbours; and as he was known at present to have reason possibly for hidden movements in search of his quarry, there was not that hue and cry raised concerning the presence of the boat and the absence of the owner that would have been aroused in the case of some other; still, the interest in his whereabouts gradually grew, and Ann heard the talk about it.
Within her own heart an unexpressed terror grew stronger and stronger.
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