Mrs. Bunting made no answer; she simply stepped aside to allow Daisy to go down.
“Mr. Sleuth won’t never come back no more,” she said sombrely, and then she felt both glad and angry at the extraordinary change which came over her husband’s face. Yet, perversely, that look of relief, of right-down joy, chiefly angered her, and tempted her to add, “That’s to say, I don’t suppose he will.”
And Bunting’s face altered again; the old, anxious, depressed look, the look it had worn the last few days, returned.
“What makes you think he mayn’t come back?” he muttered.
“Too long to tell you now,” she said. “Wait till the child’s gone to bed.”
And Bunting had to restrain his curiosity.
And then, when at last Daisy had gone off to the back room where she now slept with her stepmother, Mrs. Bunting beckoned to her husband to follow her upstairs.
Before doing so he went down the passage and put the chain on the door. And about this they had a few sharp whispered words.
“You’re never going to shut him out?” she expostulated angrily, beneath her breath.
“I’m not going to leave Daisy down here with that man perhaps walking in any minute.”