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John Barrington Cowles | Arthur Conan Doyle | |
Part I. |
Page 9 of 9 |
We then walked on for some time in silence. "She is an old fool," at length muttered Cowles. "She is mad." "Who is?" I asked. "Why, that old woman--that aunt of Kate's--Mrs. Merton, or whatever her name is." Then I knew that my poor colourless friend had been speaking to Cowles, but he never said anything more as to the nature of her communication. My companion went to bed early that night, and I sat up a long time by the fire, thinking over all that I had seen and heard. I felt that there was some mystery about the girl--some dark fatality so strange as to defy conjecture. I thought of Prescott's interview with her before their marriage, and the fatal termination of it. I coupled it with poor drunken Reeves' plaintive cry, "Why did she not tell me sooner?" and with the other words he had spoken. Then my mind ran over Mrs. Merton's warning to me, Cowles' reference to her, and even the episode of the whip and the cringing dog. |
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The Captain of the Polestar Arthur Conan Doyle |
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