[The Lodger by Marie Belloc Lowndes]@TWC D-Link book
The Lodger

CHAPTER I
7/15

He no longer felt like going into the various little shops, close by, patronised by him in more prosperous days, and Mrs.Bunting also went afield to make the slender purchases which still had to be made every day or two, if they were to be saved from actually starving to death.
Suddenly, across the stillness of the dark November evening there came the muffled sounds of hurrying feet and of loud, shrill shouting outside--boys crying the late afternoon editions of the evening papers.
Bunting turned uneasily in his chair.

The giving up of a daily paper had been, after his tobacco, his bitterest deprivation.

And the paper was an older habit than the tobacco, for servants are great readers of newspapers.
As the shouts came through the closed windows and the thick damask curtains, Bunting felt a sudden sense of mind hunger fall upon him.
It was a shame--a damned shame--that he shouldn't know what was happening in the world outside! Only criminals are kept from hearing news of what is going on beyond their prison walls.

And those shouts, those hoarse, sharp cries must portend that something really exciting had happened, something warranted to make a man forget for the moment his own intimate, gnawing troubles.
He got up, and going towards the nearest window strained his ears to listen.

There fell on them, emerging now and again from the confused babel of hoarse shouts, the one clear word "Murder!" Slowly Bunting's brain pieced the loud, indistinct cries into some sort of connected order.


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