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Come
,
my
friend
,
said
he
,
our
day
s
work
has
been
quite
long
enough
.
I
think
that
we
have
gathered
all
that
we
can
.
It
s
a
long
walk
to
the
school
,
and
the
sooner
we
get
started
the
better
.
He
hardly
opened
his
lips
during
that
weary
trudge
across
the
moor
,
nor
would
he
enter
the
school
when
he
reached
it
,
but
went
on
to
Mackleton
Station
,
whence
he
could
send
some
telegrams
.
Late
at
night
I
heard
him
consoling
Dr
.
Huxtable
,
prostrated
by
the
tragedy
of
his
master
s
death
,
and
later
still
he
entered
my
room
as
alert
and
vigorous
as
he
had
been
when
he
started
in
the
morning
.
All
goes
well
,
my
friend
,
said
he
.
I
promise
that
before
to
-
morrow
evening
we
shall
have
reached
the
solution
of
the
mystery
.
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At
eleven
o
clock
next
morning
my
friend
and
I
were
walking
up
the
famous
yew
avenue
of
Holdernesse
Hall
.
We
were
ushered
through
the
magnificent
Elizabethan
doorway
and
into
his
Grace
s
study
.
There
we
found
Mr
.
James
Wilder
,
demure
and
courtly
,
but
with
some
trace
of
that
wild
terror
of
the
night
before
still
lurking
in
his
furtive
eyes
and
in
his
twitching
features
.
You
have
come
to
see
his
Grace
?
I
am
sorry
,
but
the
fact
is
that
the
Duke
is
far
from
well
.
He
has
been
very
much
upset
by
the
tragic
news
.
We
received
a
telegram
from
Dr
.
Huxtable
yesterday
afternoon
,
which
told
us
of
your
discovery
.
I
must
see
the
Duke
,
Mr
.
Wilder
.
But
he
is
in
his
room
.
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Then
I
must
go
to
his
room
.
I
believe
he
is
in
his
bed
.
I
will
see
him
there
.