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--
Give
us
that
stick
here
,
Cranly
said
.
He
snatched
the
ashplant
roughly
from
Stephen
's
hand
and
sprang
down
the
steps
:
but
Temple
,
hearing
him
move
in
pursuit
,
fled
through
the
dusk
like
a
wild
creature
,
nimble
and
fleet-footed
.
Cranly
's
heavy
boots
were
heard
loudly
charging
across
the
quadrangle
and
then
returning
heavily
,
foiled
and
spurning
the
gravel
at
each
step
.
His
step
was
angry
and
with
an
angry
abrupt
gesture
he
thrust
the
stick
back
into
Stephen
's
hand
.
Stephen
felt
that
his
anger
had
another
cause
but
,
feigning
patience
,
touched
his
arm
slightly
and
said
quietly
:
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--
Cranly
,
I
told
you
I
wanted
to
speak
to
you
.
Come
away
.
Cranly
looked
at
him
for
a
few
moments
and
asked
:
--
Now
?
--
Yes
,
now
,
Stephen
said
.
We
ca
n't
speak
here
.
Come
away
.
They
crossed
the
quadrangle
together
without
speaking
.
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The
bird
call
from
SIGFRIED
whistled
softly
followed
them
from
the
steps
of
the
porch
.
Cranly
turned
,
and
Dixon
,
who
had
whistled
,
called
out
:
--
Where
are
you
fellows
off
to
?
What
about
that
game
,
Cranly
?
They
parleyed
in
shouts
across
the
still
air
about
a
game
of
billiards
to
be
played
in
the
Adelphi
hotel
.
Stephen
walked
on
alone
and
out
into
the
quiet
of
Kildare
Street
opposite
Maple
's
hotel
he
stood
to
wait
,
patient
again
.
The
name
of
the
hotel
,
a
colourless
polished
wood
,
and
its
colourless
front
stung
him
like
a
glance
of
polite
disdain
.
He
stared
angrily
back
at
the
softly
lit
drawing-room
of
the
hotel
in
which
he
imagined
the
sleek
lives
of
the
patricians
of
Ireland
housed
in
calm
.
They
thought
of
army
commissions
and
land
agents
:
peasants
greeted
them
along
the
roads
in
the
country
;
they
knew
the
names
of
certain
French
dishes
and
gave
orders
to
jarvies
in
high-pitched
provincial
voices
which
pierced
through
their
skin-tight
accents
.