No; she had never seen such a thing with either of them. They weren't that type.
There she was again, harping on their quietness. Was it mere partisanship, or was it a feeble attempt to head him off the track? He wanted to ask if Lamont were left-handed, but something held him back. If she were not being straight with him, that question in relation to Lamont would alarm her immediately. It would give away the whole extent of his investigations. She would give warning and flush the bird from cover long before they were ready to shoot. And it was not vital at the moment. The man of the photograph was the man who had lived with Sorrell, was the man who had fled at sight of him in the Strand, was the man who had had all Sorrell's money, and was almost certainly the man of the queue. Legarde could identify him. It was more important at the moment to keep Mrs. Everett in the dark as to how much they knew.
"When did Sorrell leave for America?"
"His boat sailed on the 14th," she said, "but he left here on the 13th."
"Unlucky day!" said Grant, hoping to bring the conversation to a less formal and less antagonistic level.
"I don't believe in superstition," she said. "One day is very like another."
But Grant was thinking hard. The 13th was the night of the murder.
"Did Lamont leave with him?" he asked.
Yes, they had left together in the morning. Mr. Lamont was going to take his things to his new rooms and then to meet Mr. Sorrell. Mr. Sorrell was going down to Southampton with a boat train at night. She had wanted to go to see him off, but he had been very insistent that she shouldn't.
"Why?" asked Grant.