Entering now, he gave it quick scrutiny. It was clear he was looking for something in particular. He was, in fact, searching for signs of its occupancy by another than Shiel Crozier—tokens of a woman’s presence. There was, however, no sign at all of that, though there were signs of a woman’s care and attention in a number of little things—homelike, solicitous, perhaps affectionate care and attention. Certainly the spotless pillows, the pretty curtains, the pincushion, and charmingly valanced bed and shelves, cheap though the material was, showed a woman’s very friendly care. When he lived in that house there were no such little attentions paid to him! It was his experience that where such attentions went something else went with them. A sensualist himself, it was not conceivable to him that men and women could be under the same roof without “passages of sympathetic friendship and tokens of affinity.” That was a phrase he had frequently used when pursuing his own sort of happiness.

His swift scrutiny showed that Crozier’s wife had no habitation here, and that gave him his cue for what the French call “the reconstruction of the crime.” It certainly was clear that, as he had suggested at the Logan Trial, there was serious trouble in the Crozier family of two, and the offender must naturally be the man who had flown, not the woman who had stayed. Here was circumstantial evidence.

His suggestive glance, the look in his eyes, did not escape Crozier, who read it all aright; and a primitive expression of natural antipathy passed across his mediaeval face, making it almost inquisitorial.

“Will you care to sit?” he said, however, with the courtesy he could never avoid; and he pointed to a chair beside the little table in the centre of the room. As Burlingame sat down he noticed on the table a crumpled handkerchief. It had lettering in the corner. He spread it out slightly with his fingers, as though abstractedly thinking of what he was about to say. The initial in the corner was K. Kitty had left it on the table while she was talking to Mrs. Crozier a halfhour before. Whatever Burlingame actually thought or believed, he could not now resist picking up the handkerchief and looking at it with a mocking smile. It was too good a chance to waste. He still hugged to his evil heart the humiliating remembrance of his expulsion from this house, the share Crozier had had in it, and the things which Crozier had said to him then. He had his enemy now between the upper and the nether mill-stones, and he meant to grind him to the flour of utter abasement. It was clear that the arrival of Mrs. Crozier had brought him no relief, for Crozier’s face was not that of a man who had found and opened a casket of good fortune.

“Rather dangerous that, in the bedroom of a family man,” he said, picking up the handkerchief and looking suggestively from the lettering in the corner to Crozier. He laid it down again, smiling detestably.

Crozier calmly picked up the handkerchief, saw the lettering, then went quietly to the door of the room and called Mrs. Tynan’s name. Presently she appeared. Crozier beckoned her into the room. When she entered, he closed the door behind her.

“Mrs. Tynan,” he said, “this fellow found your daughter’s handkerchief on my table, and he has said regarding it, ‘Rather dangerous that, in the bedroom of a family man.’ What would you like me to do with him?”

Mrs. Tynan walked up to Burlingame with the look of a woman of the Commune and said: “If I had a son I would disown him if he didn’t mangle you till your wife would never know you again, you loathesome thing. There isn’t a man or woman in Askatoon who’d believe your sickening slanders, for every one knows what you are. How dare you enter this house? If the men of Askatoon had any manhood in them they would tar-and-feather you. My girl is as good as any girl that ever lived, and you know it. Now go out of here—now!”

Crozier intervened quietly. “Mrs. Tynan, I asked him in here because it is my room. I have some business with him. When it is over, then he shall go, and we will fumigate the place. As for the tar-and-feathers, you might leave that to me. I think I can arrange it.

“I’ll turn the hose on him as he goes out, if you don’t mind,” the irate mother exclaimed as she left the room.