He heard no answer, no sound, no movement. He noted that thestillness of the three before him had no element of astonishment.The look of shock on their faces was not the shock of people at thesudden explosion of a bomb, but the shock of people who hadknown that they were playing with a lighted fuse. There were nooutcries, no protests, no questions; they knew that he meant it andthey knew everything it meant. A dim, sickening feeling told himthat they had known it long before he did."You . . . you wouldn't throw your own b