The Chief Constable turned back to the journal and skimmed over a number of the entries.
“Do you know,” he pointed out after a time, “that young fellow had an unpleasant mind.”
“You surprise me,” the Inspector retorted ironically. “I suppose you've come to the place where he gets really smitten with Mrs. Silverdale's charms?”
“Yes. There's a curious rising irritation through it all. It's evident that she led him on, and then let him down, time after time.”
“For all his fluff about his complex character and so forth, he really seems to have been very simple,” was Flamborough's verdict. “She led him a dance for months; and anyone with half an eye could see all along that she was only playing with him. It's as plain as print, even in his own account of the business.”
“Quite, I admit. But you must remember that he imagined he was out of the common—irresistible. He couldn't bring himself to believe things were as they were.”
“Turn to the later entries,” the Inspector advised; and Sir Clinton did so.
“This is the one you mean? Where she turned him down quite bluntly, so that even he got an inkling of how matters really stood?”
“Yes. Now go on from there,” Flamborough directed.
Sir Clinton passed from one red marker to the other, reading the entries indicated at each of the points.