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"
Do
!
Do
go
to
bed
by
all
means
,
and
get
a
good
night
's
sleep
.
God
knows
!
you
want
it
.
I
am
more
than
glad
you
have
made
the
suggestion
,
for
I
feared
when
I
saw
you
tonight
that
I
might
have
you
on
my
hands
a
patient
next
.
"
She
gave
a
sigh
of
relief
,
and
the
tired
look
seemed
to
melt
from
her
face
.
Never
shall
I
forget
the
deep
,
earnest
look
in
her
great
,
beautiful
black
eyes
as
she
said
to
me
:
"
You
will
guard
Father
tonight
,
wo
n't
you
,
with
Doctor
Winchester
?
I
am
so
anxious
about
him
that
every
second
brings
new
fears
.
But
I
am
really
worn-out
;
and
if
I
do
n't
get
a
good
sleep
,
I
think
I
shall
go
mad
.
I
will
change
my
room
for
tonight
.
I
'm
afraid
that
if
I
stay
so
close
to
Father
's
room
I
shall
multiply
every
sound
into
a
new
terror
.
But
,
of
course
,
you
will
have
me
waked
if
there
be
any
cause
.
I
shall
be
in
the
bedroom
of
the
little
suite
next
the
boudoir
off
the
hall
.
I
had
those
rooms
when
first
I
came
to
live
with
Father
,
and
I
had
no
care
then
...
.
It
will
be
easier
to
rest
there
;
and
perhaps
for
a
few
hours
I
may
forget
.
I
shall
be
all
right
in
the
morning
.
Good-night
!
"
When
I
had
closed
the
door
behind
her
and
come
back
to
the
little
table
at
which
we
had
been
sitting
,
Doctor
Winchester
said
:
"
That
poor
girl
is
overwrought
to
a
terrible
degree
.
I
am
delighted
that
she
is
to
get
a
rest
.
It
will
be
life
to
her
;
and
in
the
morning
she
will
be
all
right
.
Her
nervous
system
is
on
the
verge
of
a
breakdown
Did
you
notice
how
fearfully
disturbed
she
was
,
and
how
red
she
got
when
she
came
in
and
found
us
talking
?
An
ordinary
thing
like
that
,
in
her
own
house
with
her
own
guests
,
would
n't
under
normal
circumstances
disturb
her
!
"
I
was
about
to
tell
him
,
as
an
explanation
in
her
defence
,
how
her
entrance
was
a
repetition
of
her
finding
the
Detective
and
myself
alone
together
earlier
in
the
day
,
when
I
remembered
that
that
conversation
was
so
private
that
even
an
allusion
to
it
might
be
awkward
in
evoking
curiosity
.
So
I
remained
silent
.
We
stood
up
to
go
to
the
sick-room
;
but
as
we
took
our
way
through
the
dimly-lighted
corridor
I
could
not
help
thinking
,
again
and
again
,
and
again
--
ay
,
and
for
many
a
day
after
--
how
strange
it
was
that
she
had
interrupted
me
on
two
such
occasions
when
touching
on
such
a
theme
.
There
was
certainly
some
strange
web
of
accidents
,
in
whose
meshes
we
were
all
involved
.
That
night
everything
went
well
.
Knowing
that
Miss
Trelawny
herself
was
not
on
guard
,
Doctor
Winchester
and
I
doubled
our
vigilance
.
The
Nurses
and
Mrs.
Grant
kept
watch
,
and
the
Detectives
made
their
visit
each
quarter
of
an
hour
.
All
night
the
patient
remained
in
his
trance
.
He
looked
healthy
,
and
his
chest
rose
and
fell
with
the
easy
breathing
of
a
child
.
But
he
never
stirred
;
only
for
his
breathing
he
might
have
been
of
marble
.
Doctor
Winchester
and
I
wore
our
respirators
,
and
irksome
they
were
on
that
intolerably
hot
night
.
Between
midnight
and
three
o'clock
I
felt
anxious
,
and
had
once
more
that
creepy
feeling
to
which
these
last
few
nights
had
accustomed
me
;
but
the
grey
of
the
dawn
,
stealing
round
the
edges
of
the
blinds
,
came
with
inexpressible
relief
,
followed
by
restfulness
,
went
through
the
household
.
During
the
hot
night
my
ears
,
strained
to
every
sound
,
had
been
almost
painfully
troubled
;
as
though
my
brain
or
sensoria
were
in
anxious
touch
with
them
.
Every
breath
of
the
Nurse
or
the
rustle
of
her
dress
;
every
soft
pat
of
slippered
feet
,
as
the
Policeman
went
his
rounds
;
every
moment
of
watching
life
,
seemed
to
be
a
new
impetus
to
guardianship
.
Something
of
the
same
feeling
must
have
been
abroad
in
the
house
;
now
and
again
I
could
hear
upstairs
the
sound
of
restless
feet
,
and
more
than
once
downstairs
the
opening
of
a
window
.
With
the
coming
of
the
dawn
,
however
,
all
this
ceased
,
and
the
whole
household
seemed
to
rest
.
Doctor
Winchester
went
home
when
Sister
Doris
came
to
relieve
Mrs.
Grant
.