CHRISTOPHER
. It’s not true—it’s not true! You’re all against me. Everyone’s always been against me. You’re going to frame me for a murder. It’s persecution, ((GILES
MAJOR
METCALF. (MOLLIE
. (TROTTER
. (MOLLIE
. (TROTTER
. ((CHRISTOPHER
GILES
. I think you’re crazy, Mollie. (MOLLIE
. Wait, Giles, wait. Sergeant Trotter, can I—can I speak to you a minute?TROTTER
. Certainly, Mrs. Ralston. Will the rest of you go into the dining room, please.(
GILES
. I’m staying.MOLLIE
. No, Giles, you, too, please.GILES
. (MOLLIE
. Please.(GILES
TROTTER
. Yes, Mrs. Ralston, (MOLLIE
. (TROTTER
. We don’t actually know a thing. All we’ve got so far is that the woman who joined with her husband in ill-treating and starving those children has been killed, and that the woman magistrate who was responsible for placing them there has been killed. (MOLLIE
. You don’t even know that. It may have been just the snow.TROTTER
. No, Mrs. Ralston, the line was deliberately cut. It was cut just outside by the front door. I found the place.MOLLIE
. (TROTTER
. Sit down, Mrs. Ralston.MOLLIE
. (TROTTER
. (MOLLIE
. Oh, I know, and therefore it all seems to point to Christopher. But I don’t believe it is Christopher. There must be other possibilities.TROTTER
. (MOLLIE
. (TROTTER
. The mother was a drunk. She died soon after the children were taken away from her.MOLLIE
. What about their father?TROTTER
. He was an Army sergeant, serving abroad. If he’s alive, he’s probably discharged from the Army by now.MOLLIE
. You don’t know where he is now?TROTTER
. We’ve no information. To trace him may take some time, but I can assure you, Mrs. Ralston, that the police take every eventuality into account.MOLLIE
. But you don’t know where he may be at this minute, and if the son is mentally unstable, the father may have been unstable, too.TROTTER
. Well, it’s a possibility.