These considerations occurred to me while we were passing from the dining-room to the drawing-room. Sir Percival’s angry commentary on his friend’s desertion of him had not produced the slightest effect. The Count obstinately accompanied us to the tea-table—waited a minute or two in the room—went out into the hall—and returned with the postbag in his hands. It was then eight o’clock—the hour at which the letters were always despatched from Blackwater Park.
“Have you any letter for the post, Miss Halcombe?” he asked, approaching me with the bag.
I saw Madame Fosco, who was making the tea, pause, with the sugar-tongs in her hand, to listen for my answer.
“No, Count, thank you. No letters today.”