"I have no idea," Arnold answered. "To tell you the truth," he went on earnestly, "I was going to ask you whether you knew of anything in his life or affairs which could explain this?"
"I am not sure that I understand you," she said.
"It seems a strange question," Arnold continued, "and yet it presents itself. I was going to ask you whether you knew of any reason whatsoever why Mr. Weatherley should voluntarily choose to go into hiding?"
"You have something in your mind when you ask me a question like this!" she said. "What should I know about it at all? What makes you ask me?"
Then Arnold took his courage into both hands. Her eyes seemed to be compelling him.
"What I am going to say," he began, "may sound very foolish to you. I cannot help it. I only hope that you will not be angry with me."
Her eyes met his steadily.
"No," she murmured, "I will not be angry—I promise you that. It is better that I should know exactly what is in your mind. At present I do not understand."
His manner acquired a new earnestness. He forgot his luncheon and leaned across the table towards her.
"Fenella," he said, "try and consider how these things of which I am going to speak must have presented themselves to me. Try, if you can, and put yourself in my position for a few minutes. Before that evening on which Mr. Weatherley asked me to come to your house, nothing in the shape of an adventure had ever happened to me. I had had my troubles, but they were ordinary ones, such as the whole world knows of. From the day when I went to school to the day when I had to leave college hurriedly, lost my father, and came up to London a pauper, life with me was entirely an obvious affair. From the night I crossed the threshold of your house, things were different."