Mrs. Hunter. Well, her lunch break—she gets her lunch break from 1 until 2 and she would always call me just a minute or two before she goes back to work—just a few seconds—every day before she goes to work.
Mr. Liebeler. Does she work here in Dallas?
Mrs. Hunter. At Commercial Title.
Mr. Liebeler. She always calls you at about 2 o'clock; is that right?
Mrs. Hunter. Between—she has to be back at her desk at 2. She will call me anywhere, you know, when it's handy—if she comes up in town to eat, it may be about 10 minutes until 2. If she takes her lunch and eats there, it may be 15 minutes to 2, but I would always wait—I would give her a chance to call me before I would leave and I never would leave before 2 o'clock.
Mr. Liebeler. How late in the afternoon could it have been, you think, that these people did come?
Mrs. Hunter. Well, I would say between 2:30 and 3:30, because I never did stay gone past 4 o'clock. My daughter comes in from school and she didn't have any way to get in the house. I locked the house and she would get to the house before 4 and I would try to be back at the house before 4 and there was just one or two evenings that I didn't get to the house before she come in.
Mr. Liebeler. You say you would always try to get back home by 4 o'clock?
Mrs. Hunter. Yes; so I could unlock the door.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you hear the conversation between Mrs. Whitworth and this man who came in about the gun?