“Fine view, here,” he said, waving his hand in the direction of the cliff road and open bay. “Fine, bracin’ air—sea—country—birds—and all that sort of thing. You chaps in the country have all the best of it—the simple life, and no hustle or bustle.”
Sergeant Westaway looked darkly at the speaker as though he suspected him of a desire to rob him of the grievance he had brooded over in secret for twenty-five years.
“It’s dull enough,” he said ungraciously.
“But the air, man, the air!” said the London detective, inhaling great gulps of oxygen as he spoke. “It’s exhilarating; it’s glorious! Why, it should keep you going until you reach a hundred.”
“Too salt,” commented Sergeant Westaway curtly.
“The more salt in it the longer it will preserve you,” said Gillett. “What a glorious day it is.”
“The day is right enough,” said Westaway. “But to-morrow will be different.”
“Westaway doesn’t like to be enthusiastic about this locality for fear we will shift him somewhere else,” said Inspector Payne. “However, let us get to business. I must be on my way back to Lewes in an hour.”
Sergeant Westaway coughed in order to clear his throat, and then began his narrative in a loud official voice:
“At five minutes past nine last night a gentleman named Marsland came to the police station. I was in my office at the time, preparing a report. He told me that he had found the dead body of a man in this house.”