Mrs. Ansell looked at him with growing perturbation. "Saved—Bessy's life? But how? By whom?"
"She might have been allowed to live, I mean—to recover. She was killed, Maria; that woman killed her!"
Mrs. Ansell, with another cry of bewilderment, let herself drop helplessly into the nearest chair. "In heaven's name, Henry—what woman?"
He seated himself opposite to her, clutching at his stick, and leaning his weight heavily on it—a white dishevelled old man. "I wonder why you ask—just to spare me?"
Their eyes met in a piercing exchange of question and answer, and Mrs. Ansell tried to bring out reasonably: "I ask in order to understand what you are saying."
"Well, then, if you insist on keeping up appearances—my daughter-in-law killed my daughter. There you have it." He laughed silently, with a tear on his reddened eye-lids.
Mrs. Ansell groaned. "Henry, you are raving—I understand less and less."
"I don't see how I can speak more plainly. She told me so herself, in this room, not an hour ago."
"She told you? Who told you?"
"John Amherst's wife. Told me she'd killed my child. It's as easy as breathing—if you know how to use a morphia-needle."