ice, but she decided to withhold that piece of information
until she had heard all that her brother had to say.
"Certainly," she replied.
"Then you must be mad," was his indignant rejoinder. "Have you considered
the scandal this will entail upon us all?"
"Not half such a scandal as that Robert should be murdered and his family
permit the crime to go unpunished."
"I do not think that you have given this matter sufficient consideration.
It is for that reason I have come to see you this morning--before you take
action which you may have reason to regret later on. I want you to think
it over carefully, apart from a mere feminine prejudice against the
possibility of a member of the family destroying himself. If you will
listen to me I think that I shall be able to convince you that Robert,
deplorable though it may seem, did actually commit suicide."
"What's the use of going through all this again?" said Mrs. Pendleton
wearily. "Robert would not commit suicide."
"Suicide is always difficult to explain. Nobody can say what impels a man
to it."
"Robert had no reason to put an end to his life. He had everything to live
for--everything in front of him."
"You cannot say that a man bordering on sixty has everything in front of
him. I know it's considered middle-aged in this misguided country, where
people will never face the facts of life, but in simple truth Robert had
finished with life to all intents and purposes."
"You won't say that when you come to sixty yourself, Austin. Robert was a
great strong man, with years of activity before him. Besides, people don't
kill themselves because they are growing old."
"I never suggested it. I was merely pointing out that Robert hadn't
everything in front of him, to use your own phrase."
"In any case he would not have killed himself," replied Mrs. Pendleton
sharply. "Such a disgrace! He was the proudest of men, he would never have
done it."
"You always hark back to that." There was faint irritation in Austin's
tone.
"I really cannot get away from it, Austin. Can you conceive of any
reason?"
"There was a reason in Robert's case. I did not mention it to you last
night in the presence of the police sergeant, but I told Dr. Ravenshaw,
and he is inclined to agree with me. Since then I have thought it over
carefully, and I am convinced that I am right."
"What is the reason?"
"You recall the disclosure Robert made to us yesterday afternoon?"
"About his marria
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