“Och, be frank with me,” he urged her, unpardonably. “'Twill be a kindness, so it will.”
For a moment she stood before him with quickened breathing, the colour ebbing and flowing in her cheeks. Then she looked past him, and tilted her chin forward.
“You... you are quite insufferable,” she said. “I beg that you will let me pass.”
He stepped aside, and with the broad feathered hat which he still held in his hand, he waved her on towards the house.
“I'll not be detaining you any longer, ma'am. After all, the cursed thing I did for nothing can be undone. Ye'll remember afterwards that it was your hardness drove me.”
She moved to depart, then checked, and faced him again. It was she now who was on her defence, her voice quivering with indignation.
“You take that tone! You dare to take that tone!” she cried, astounding him by her sudden vehemence. “You have the effrontery to upbraid me because I will not take your hands when I know how they are stained; when I know you for a murderer and worse?”
He stared at her open-mouthed.
“A murderer—I?” he said at last.
“Must I name your victims? Did you not murder Levasseur?”