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She
was
much
moved
.
I
could
see
the
tears
gather
in
her
eyes
,
and
she
turned
away
her
head
.
The
Detective
spoke
:
"
I
am
glad
you
will
be
here
,
Mr.
Ross
.
I
shall
be
in
the
house
myself
,
as
Miss
Trelawny
will
allow
me
,
if
my
people
in
Scotland
Yard
will
permit
.
That
letter
seems
to
put
a
different
complexion
on
everything
;
though
the
mystery
remains
greater
than
ever
.
If
you
can
wait
here
an
hour
or
two
I
shall
go
to
headquarters
,
and
then
to
the
safe-makers
.
After
that
I
shall
return
;
and
you
can
go
away
easier
in
your
mind
,
for
I
shall
be
here
.
"
When
he
had
gone
,
we
two
,
Miss
Trelawny
and
I
,
remained
in
silence
.
At
last
she
raised
her
eyes
and
looked
at
me
for
a
moment
;
after
that
I
would
not
have
exchanged
places
with
a
king
.
For
a
while
she
busied
herself
round
the
extemporised
bedside
of
her
father
.
Then
,
asking
me
to
be
sure
not
to
take
my
eyes
off
him
till
she
returned
,
she
hurried
out
.
In
a
few
minutes
she
came
back
with
Mrs.
Grant
and
two
maids
and
a
couple
of
men
,
who
bore
the
entire
frame
and
furniture
of
a
light
iron
bed
.
This
they
proceeded
to
put
together
and
to
make
.
When
the
work
was
completed
,
and
the
servants
had
withdrawn
,
she
said
to
me
:
"
It
will
be
well
to
be
all
ready
when
the
Doctor
returns
He
will
surely
want
to
have
Father
put
to
bed
;
and
a
proper
bed
will
be
better
for
him
than
the
sofa
.
"
She
then
got
a
chair
close
beside
her
father
,
and
sat
down
watching
him
.
I
went
about
the
room
,
taking
accurate
note
of
all
I
saw
.
And
truly
there
were
enough
things
in
the
room
to
evoke
the
curiosity
of
any
man
--
even
though
the
attendant
circumstances
were
less
strange
.
The
whole
place
,
excepting
those
articles
of
furniture
necessary
to
a
well-furnished
bedroom
,
was
filled
with
magnificent
curios
,
chiefly
Egyptian
.
As
the
room
was
of
immense
size
there
was
opportunity
for
the
placing
of
a
large
number
of
them
,
even
if
,
as
with
these
,
they
were
of
huge
proportions
.
Whilst
I
was
still
investigating
the
room
there
came
the
sound
of
wheels
on
the
gravel
outside
the
house
.
There
was
a
ring
at
the
hall
door
,
and
a
few
minutes
later
,
after
a
preliminary
tap
at
the
door
and
an
answering
"
Come
in
!
"
Doctor
Winchester
entered
,
followed
by
a
young
woman
in
the
dark
dress
of
a
nurse
.
"
I
have
been
fortunate
!
"
he
said
as
he
came
in
.
"
I
found
her
at
once
and
free
.
Miss
Trelawny
,
this
is
Nurse
Kennedy
!
"
I
was
struck
by
the
way
the
two
young
women
looked
at
each
other
.
I
suppose
I
have
been
so
much
in
the
habit
of
weighing
up
in
my
own
mind
the
personality
of
witnesses
and
of
forming
judgment
by
their
unconscious
action
and
mode
of
bearing
themselves
,
that
the
habit
extends
to
my
life
outside
as
well
as
within
the
court-house
.
At
this
moment
of
my
life
anything
that
interested
Miss
Trelawny
interested
me
;
and
as
she
had
been
struck
by
the
newcomer
I
instinctively
weighed
her
up
also
.
By
comparison
of
the
two
I
seemed
somehow
to
gain
a
new
knowledge
of
Miss
Trelawny
.
Certainly
,
the
two
women
made
a
good
contrast
.
Miss
Trelawny
was
of
fine
figure
;
dark
,
straight-featured
.
She
had
marvellous
eyes
;
great
,
wide-open
,
and
as
black
and
soft
as
velvet
,
with
a
mysterious
depth
.
To
look
in
them
was
like
gazing
at
a
black
mirror
such
as
Doctor
Dee
used
in
his
wizard
rites
.
I
heard
an
old
gentleman
at
the
picnic
,
a
great
oriental
traveller
,
describe
the
effect
of
her
eyes
"
as
looking
at
night
at
the
great
distant
lamps
of
a
mosque
through
the
open
door
.
"
The
eyebrows
were
typical
.
Finely
arched
and
rich
in
long
curling
hair
,
they
seemed
like
the
proper
architectural
environment
of
the
deep
,
splendid
eyes
.
Her
hair
was
black
also
,
but
was
as
fine
as
silk
.
Generally
black
hair
is
a
type
of
animal
strength
and
seems
as
if
some
strong
expression
of
the
forces
of
a
strong
nature
;
but
in
this
case
there
could
be
no
such
thought
.
There
were
refinement
and
high
breeding
;
and
though
there
was
no
suggestion
of
weakness
,
any
sense
of
power
there
was
,
was
rather
spiritual
than
animal
.