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435 lines
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-----=====Earth's Dreamlands=====-----
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(313)558-5024 {14.4} (313)558-5517
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A BBS for text file junkies
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RPGNet GM File Archive Site
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.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.
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The Adventure of the Veiled Lodger
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When one considers that Mr. Sherlock Holmes was in active
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practice for twenty-three years, and that during seventeen of these
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I was allowed to cooperate with him and to keep notes of his
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doings, it will be clear that I have a mass of material at my
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command. The problem has always been not to find but to
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choose. There is the long row of year-books which fill a shelf
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and there are the dispatch-cases filled with documents, a perfect
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quarry for the student not only of crime but of the social and
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official scandals of the late Victorian era. Concerning these
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latter, I may say that the writers of agonized letters, who beg that
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the honour of their families or the reputation of famous forebears
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may not be touched, have nothing to fear. The discretion and
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high sense of professional honour which have always distin-
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guished my friend are still at work in the choice of these mem-
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oirs, and no confidence will be abused. I deprecate, however, in
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the strongest way the attempts which have been made lately to
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get at and to destroy these papers. The source of these outrages
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is known, and if they are repeated I have Mr. Holmes's authority
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for saying that the whole story concerning the politician, the
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lighthouse, and the trained cormorant will be given to the public.
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There is at least one reader who will understand.
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It is not reasonable to suppose that every one of these cases
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gave Holmes the opportunity of showing those curious gifts of
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instinct and observation which I have endeavoured to set forth in
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these memoirs. Sometimes he had with much effort to pick the
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fruit, sometimes it fell easily into his lap. But the most terrible
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human tragedies were often involved in those cases which brought
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him the fewest personal opportunities, and it is one of these
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which I now desire to record. In telling it, I have made a slight
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change of name and place, but otherwise the facts are as stated.
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One forenoon -- it was late in 1896 -- I received a hurried note
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from Holmes asking for my attendance. When I arrived I found
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him seated in a smoke-laden atmosphere, with an elderly, moth-
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erly woman of the buxom landlady type in the corresponding
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chair in front of him.
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"This is Mrs. Merrilow, of South Brixton," said my friend
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with a wave of the hand. "Mrs. Merrilow does not object to
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tobacco, Watson, if you wish to indulge your filthy habits. Mrs.
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Merrilow has an interesting story to tell which may well lead to
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further developments in which your presence may be useful."
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"Anything I can do --"
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"You will understand, Mrs. Merrilow, that if I come to Mrs.
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Ronder I should prefer to have a witness. You will make her
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understand that before we arrive."
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"Lord bless you, Mr. Holmes," said our visitor, "she is that
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anxious to see you that you might bring the whole parish at your
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heels!"
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"Then we shall come early in the afternoon. Let us see that
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we have our facts correct before we start. If we go over them it
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will help Dr. Watson to understand the situation. You say that
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Mrs. Ronder has been your lodger for seven years and that you
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have only once seen her face."
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"And I wish to God I had not!" said Mrs. Merrilow.
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"It was, I understand, terribly mutilated."
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"Well, Mr. Holmes, you would hardly say it was a face at all.
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That's how it looked. Our milkman got a glimpse of her once
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peeping out of the upper window, and he dropped his tin and the
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milk all over the front garden. That is the kind of face it is.
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When I saw her -- I happened on her unawares -- she covered up
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quick, and then she said, 'Now, Mrs. Merrilow, you know at
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last why it is that I never raise my veil.' "
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"Do you know anything about her history?"
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"Nothing at all."
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"Did she give references when she came?"
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"No, sir, but she gave hard cash, and plenty of it. A quarter's
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rent right down on the table in advance and no arguing about
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terms. In these times a poor woman like me can't afford to turn
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down a chance like that."
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"Did she give any reason for choosing your house?"
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"Mine stands well back from the road and is more private
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than most. Then, again, I only take the one, and I have no
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family of my own. I reckon she had tried others and found that
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mine suited her best. It's privacy she is after, and she is ready to
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pay for it."
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"You say that she never showed her face from first to last
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save on the one accidental occasion. Well, it is a very remark-
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able story, most remarkable, and I don't wonder that you want it
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examined."
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"I don't, Mr. Holmes. I am quite satisfied so long as I get my
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rent. You could not have a quieter lodger, or one who gives less
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trouble."
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"Then what has brought matters to a head?"
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"Her health, Mr. Holmes. She seems to be wasting away.
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And there's something terrible on her mind. 'Murder!' she cries.
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'Murder!' And once I heard her: 'You cruel beast! You mon-
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ster!' she cried. It was in the night, and it fair rang through the
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house and sent the shivers through me. So I went to her in the
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morning. 'Mrs. Ronder,' I says, 'if you have anything that is
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troubling your soul, there's the clergy,' I says, 'and there's the
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police. Between them you should get some help.' 'For God's
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sake, not the police!' says she, 'and the clergy can't change what
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is past. And yet,' she says, 'it would ease my mind if someone
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knew the truth before I died.' 'Well,' says I, 'if you won't have
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the regulars, there is this detective man what we read about' --
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beggin' your pardon, Mr. Holmes. And she, she fair jumped
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at it. 'That's the man,' says she. 'I wonder I never thought of it
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before. Bring him here, Mrs. Merrilow, and if he won't come,
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tell him I am the wife of Ronder's wild beast show. Say that,
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and give him the name Abbas Parva. Here it is as she wrote it,
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Abbas Parva. 'That will bring him if he's the man I think he
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is.' "
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"And it will, too," remarked Holmes. "Very good, Mrs.
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Merrilow. I should like to have a little chat with Dr. Watson.
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That will carry us till lunch-time. About three o'clock you may
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expect to see us at your house in Brixton."
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Our visitor had no sooner waddled out of the room -- no other
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verb can describe Mrs. Merrilow's method of progression -- than
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Sherlock Holmes threw himself with fierce energy upon the pile
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of commonplace books in the corner. For a few minutes there
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was a constant swish of the leaves, and then with a grunt of
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satisfaction he came upon what he sought. So excited was he that
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he did not rise, but sat upon the floor like some strange Buddha,
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with crossed legs, the huge books all round him, and one open
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upon his knees.
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"The case worried me at the time, Watson. Here are my
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marginal notes to prove it. I confess that I could make nothing of
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it. And yet I was convinced that the coroner was wrong. Have
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you no recollection of the Abbas Parva tragedy?"
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"None, Holmes."
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"And yet you were with me then. But certainly my own
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impression was very superficial. For there was nothing to go by,
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and none of the parties had engaged my services. Perhaps you
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would care to read the papers?"
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"Could you not give me the points?"
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"That is very easily done. It will probably come back to your
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memory as I talk. Ronder, of course, was a household word. He
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was the rival of Wombwell, and of Sanger, one of the greatest
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showmen of his day. There is evidence, however, that he took to
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drink, and that both he and his show were on the down grade at
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the time of the great tragedy. The caravan had halted for the
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night at Abbas Parva, which is a small village in Berkshire,
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when this horror occurred. They were on their way to Wimble-
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don, travelling by road, and they were simply camping and not
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exhibiting, as the place is so small a one that it would not have
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paid them to open.
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"They had among their exhibits a very fine North African
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lion. Sahara King was its name, and it was the habit, both of
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Ronder and his wife, to give exhibitions inside its cage. Here,
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you see, is a photograph of the performance by which you will
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perceive that Ronder was a huge porcine person and that his wife
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was a very magnificent woman. It was deposed at the inquest
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that there had been some signs that the lion was dangerous, but,
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as usual, familiarity begat contempt, and no notice was taken of
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the fact.
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"It was usual for either Ronder or his wife to feed the lion at
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night. Sometimes one went, sometimes both, but they never
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allowed anyone else to do it, for they believed that so long as
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they were the food-carriers he would regard them as benefactors
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and would never molest them. On this particular night, seven
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years ago, they both went, and a very terrible happening fol-
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lowed, the details of which have never been made clear.
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"It seems that the whole camp was roused near midnight by
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the roars of the animal and the screams of the woman. The
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different grooms and employees rushed from their tents, carrying
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lanterns, and by their light an awful sight was revealed. Ronder
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lay, with the back of his head crushed in and deep claw-marks
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across his scalp, some ten yards from the cage, which was open.
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Close to the door of the cage lay Mrs. Ronder upon her back,
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with the creature squatting and snarling above her. It had torn
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her face in such a fashion that it was never thought that she could
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live. Several of thc circus men, headed by Leonardo, the strong
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man, and Griggs, the clown, drove the creature off with poles,
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upon which it sprang back into the cage and was at once locked
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in. How it had got loose was a mystery. It was conjectured that
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the pair intended to enter the cage, but that when the door was
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loosed the creature bounded out upon them. There was no other
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point of interest in the evidence save that the woman in a
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delirium of agony kept screaming, 'Coward! Coward!' as she
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was carried back to the van in which they lived. It was six
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months before she was fit to give evidence, but the inquest was
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duly held, with the obvious verdict of death from misadventure."
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"What alternative could be conceived?" said I.
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"You may well say so. And yet there were one or two points
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which worried young Edmunds, of the Berkshire Constabulary.
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A smart lad that! He was sent later to Allahabad. That was how I
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came into the matter, for he dropped in and smoked a pipe or
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two over it."
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"A thin, yellow-haired man?"
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"Exactly. I was sure you would pick up the trail presently."
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"But what worried him?"
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"Well, we were both worried. It was so deucedly difficult to
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reconstruct the affair. Look at it from the lion's point of view.
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He is liberated. What does he do? He takes half a dozen bounds
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forward, which brings him to Ronder. Ronder turns to fly -- the
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claw-marks were on the back of his head -- but the lion strikes
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him down. Then, instead of bounding on and escaping, he
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returns to the woman, who was close to the cage, and he knocks
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her over and chews her face up. Then, again, those cries of hers
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would seem to imply that her husband had in some way failed
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her. What could the poor devil have done to help her? You see
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the difficulty?"
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"Quite."
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"And then there was another thing. It comes back to me now
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as I think it over. There was some evidence that just at the time
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the lion roared and the woman screamed, a man began shouting
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in terror."
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"This man Ronder, no doubt."
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"Well, if his skull was smashed in you would hardly expect to
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hear from him again. There were at least two witnesses who
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spoke of the cries of a man being mingled with those of a
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woman."
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"I should think the whole camp was crying out by then. As to
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the other points, I think I could suggest a solution."
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"I should be glad to consider it."
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"The two were together, ten yards from the cage, when the
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lion got loose. The man turned and was struck down. The
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woman conceived the idea of getting into the cage and shutting
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the door. It was her only refuge. She made for it, and just as she
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reached it the beast bounded after her and knocked her over. She
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was angry with her husband for having encouraged the beast's
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rage by turning. If they had faced it they might have cowed it.
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Hence her cries of 'Coward!' "
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"Brilliant, Watson! Only one flaw in your diamond."
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"What is the flaw, Holmes?"
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"If they were both ten paces from the cage, how came the
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beast to get loose?"
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"Is it possible that they had some enemy who loosed it?"
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"And why should it attack them savagely when it was in the
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habit of playing with them, and doing tricks with them inside the
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cage?"
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"Possibly the same enemy had done something to enrage it."
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Holmes looked thoughtful and remained in silence for some
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moments.
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"Well, Watson, there is this to be said for your theory.
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Ronder was a man of many enemies. Edmunds told me that in
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his cups he was horrible. A huge bully of a man, he cursed and
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slashed at everyone who came in his way. I expect those cries
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about a monster, of which our visitor has spoken, were nocturnal
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reminiscences of the dear departed. However, our speculations
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are futile until we have all the facts. There is a cold partridge on
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the sideboard, Watson, and a bottle of Montrachet. Let us renew
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our energies before we make a fresh call upon them."
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When our hansom deposited us at the house of Mrs. Merrilow,
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we found that plump lady blocking up the open door of her
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humble but retired abode. It was very clear that her chief
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preoccupation was lest she should lose a valuable lodger, and she
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implored us, before showing us up, to say and do nothing which
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could lead to so undesirable an end. Then, having reassured her,
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we followed her up the straight, badly carpeted staircase and
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were shown into the room of the mysterious lodger.
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It was a close, musty, ill-ventilated place, as might be ex-
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pected, since its inmate seldom left it. From keeping beasts in a
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cage, the woman seemed, by some retribution of fate, to have
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become herself a beast in a cage. She sat now in a broken arm-
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chair in the shadowy corner of the room. Long years of inaction
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had coarsened the lines of her figure, but at some period it must
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have been beautiful, and was still full and voluptuous. A thick
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dark veil covered her face, but it was cut off close at her upper
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lip and disclosed a perfectly shaped mouth and a delicately
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rounded chin. I could well conceive that she had indeed been a
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very remarkable woman. Her voice, too, was well modulated
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and pleasing.
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"My name is not unfamiliar to you, Mr. Holmes," said she.
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"I thought that it would bring you."
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"That is so, madam, though I do not know how you are aware
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that I was interested in your case."
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"l learned it when I had recovered my health and was exam-
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ined by Mr. Edmunds, the county detective. I fear I lied to him.
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Perhaps it would have been wiser had I told the truth."
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"It is usually wiser to tell the truth. But why did you lie to
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him?"
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"Because the fate of someone else depended upon it. I know
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that he was a very worthless being, and yet I would not have his
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destruction upon my conscience. We had been so close -- so
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close!"
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"But has this impediment been removed?"
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"Yes, sir. The person that I allude to is dead."
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"Then why should you not now tell the police anything you
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know?"
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"Because there is another person to be considered. That other
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person is myself. I could not stand the scandal and publicity
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which would come from a police examination. I have not long to
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live, but I wish to die undisturbed. And yet I wanted to find one
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man of judgment to whom I could tell my terrible story, so that
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when I am gone all might be understood."
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"You compliment me, madam. At the same time, I am a
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responsible person. I do not promise you that when you have
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spoken I may not myself think it my duty to refer the case to the
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police."
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"I think not, Mr. Holmes. I know your character and methods
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too well, for I have followed your work for some years. Reading
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is the only pleasure which fate has left me, and I miss little
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which passes in the world. But in any case, I will take my
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chance of the use which you may make of my tragedy. It will
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ease my mind to tell it."
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"My friend and I would be glad to hear it."
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The woman rose and took from a drawer the photograph of a
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man. He was clearly a professional acrobat, a man of magnifi-
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cent physique, taken with his huge arms folded across his swollen
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chest and a smile breaking from under his heavy moustache -- the
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self-satisfied smile of the man of many conquests.
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"That is Leonardo," she said.
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"Leonardo, the strong man, who gave evidence?"
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"The same. And this -- this is my husband."
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It was a dreadful face -- a human pig, or rather a human wild
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boar, for it was formidable in its bestiality. One could imagine
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that vile mouth champing and foaming in its rage, and one could
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conceive those small, vicious eyes darting pure malignancy as
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they looked forth upon the world. Ruffian, bully, beast -- it was
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all written on that heavy-jowled face.
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"Those two pictures will help you, gentlemen, to understand
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the story. I was a poor circus girl brought up on the sawdust, and
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doing springs through the hoop before I was ten. When I became
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a woman this man loved me, if such lust as his can be called
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love, and in an evil moment I became his wife. From that day I
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was in hell, and he the devil who tormented me. There was no
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one in the show who did not know of his treatment. He deserted
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me for others. He tied me down and lashed me with his riding-
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whip when I complained. They all pitied me and they all loathed
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him, but what could they do? They feared him, one and all. For
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he was terrible at all times, and murderous when he was drunk.
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Again and again he was had up for assault, and for cruelty to the
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beasts, but he had plenty of money and the fines were nothing to
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him. The best men all left us, and the show began to go
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downhill. It was only Leonardo and I who kept it up -- with little
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Jimmy Griggs, the clown. Poor devil, he had not much to be
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funny about, but he did what he could to hold things together.
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"Then Leonardo came more and more into my life. You see
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what he was like. I know now the poor spirit that was hidden in
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that splendid body, but compared to my husband he seemed like
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the angel Gabriel. He pitied me and helped me, till at last our
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intimacy turned to love -- deep, deep, passionate love, such love
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as I had dreamed of but never hoped to feel. My husband
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suspected it, but I think that he was a coward as well as a bully,
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and that Leonardo was the one man that he was afraid of. He
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took revenge in his own way by torturing me more than ever.
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One night my cries brought Leonardo to the door of our van. We
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were near tragedy that night, and soon my lover and I understood
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that it could not be avoided. My husband was not fit to live. We
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planned that he should die.
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"Leonardo had a clever, scheming brain. It was he who
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planned it. I do not say that to blame him, for I was ready to go
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with him every inch of the way. But I should never have had the
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wit to think of such a plan. We made a club -- Leonardo made
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it -- and in the leaden head he fastened five long steel nails, the
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points outward, with just such a spread as the lion's paw. This
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was to give my husband his death-blow, and yet to leave the
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evidence that it was the lion which we would loose who had
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done the deed.
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"It was a pitch-dark night when my husband and I went
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down, as was our custom, to feed the beast. We carried with us
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the raw meat in a zinc pail. Leonardo was waiting at the corner
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of the big van which we should have to pass before we reached
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the cage. He was too slow, and we walked past him before he
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could strike, but he followed us on tiptoe and I heard the crash as
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the club smashed my husband's skull. My heart leaped with joy
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at the sound. I sprang forward, and I undid the catch which held
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the door of the great lion's cage.
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"And then the terrible thing happened. You may have heard
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how quick these creatures are to scent human blood, and how it
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excites them. Some strange instinct had told the creature in one
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instant that a human being had been slain. As I slipped the bars it
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bounded out and was on me in an instant. Leonardo could have
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saved me. If he had rushed forward and struck the beast with his
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club he might have cowed it. But the man lost his nerve. I heard
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him shout in his terror, and then I saw him turn and fly. At the
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same instant the teeth of the lion met in my face. Its hot, filthy
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breath had already poisoned me and I was hardly conscious of
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pain. With the palms of my hands I tried to push the great
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steaming, blood-stained jaws away from me, and I screamed for
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help. I was conscious that the camp was stirring, and then dimly
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I remembered a group of men. Leonardo, Griggs, and others,
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dragging me from under the creature's paws. That was my last
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memory, Mr. Holmes, for many a weary month. When I came to
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myself and saw myself in the mirror, I cursed that lion -- oh, how
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I cursed him! -- not because he had torn away my beauty but
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because he had not torn away my life. I had but one desire, Mr.
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Holmes, and I had enough money to gratify it. It was that I
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should cover myself so that my poor face should be seen by
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none, and that I should dwell where none whom I had ever
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known should find me. That was all that was left to me to
|
||
do -- and that is what I have done. A poor wounded beast that has
|
||
crawled into its hole to die -- that is the end of Eugenia Ronder."
|
||
We sat in silence for some time after the unhappy woman had
|
||
told her story. Then Holmes stretched out his long arm and
|
||
patted her hand with such a show of sympathy as I had seldom
|
||
known him to exhibit.
|
||
"Poor girl!" he said. "Poor girl! The ways of fate are indeed
|
||
hard to understand. If there is not some compensation hereafter,
|
||
then the world is a cruel jest. But what of this man Leonardo?"
|
||
"I never saw him or heard from him again. Perhaps I have
|
||
been wrong to feel so bitterly against him. He might as soon
|
||
have loved one of the freaks whom we carried round the country
|
||
as the thing which the lion had left. But a woman's love is not so
|
||
easily set aside. He had left me under the beast's claws, he had
|
||
deserted me in my need, and yet I could not bring myself to give
|
||
him to the gallows. For myself, I cared nothing what became of
|
||
me. What could be more dreadful than my actual life? But I
|
||
stood between Leonardo and his fate."
|
||
"And he is dead?"
|
||
"He was drowned last month when bathing near Margate. I
|
||
saw his death in the paper."
|
||
"And what did he do with this five-clawed club, which is the
|
||
most singular and ingenious part of all your story?"
|
||
"I cannot tell, Mr. Holmes. There is a chalk-pit by the camp,
|
||
with a deep green pool at the base of it. Perhaps in the depths of
|
||
that pool --"
|
||
"Well, well, it is of little consequence now. The case is
|
||
closed."
|
||
"Yes," said the woman, "the case is closed."
|
||
We had risen to go, but there was something in the woman's
|
||
voice which arrested Holmes's attention. He turned swiftly upon
|
||
her.
|
||
"Your life is not your own," he said. "Keep your hands off
|
||
it."
|
||
"What use is it to anyone?"
|
||
"How can you tell? The example of patient suffering is in
|
||
itself the most precious of all lessons to an impatient world."
|
||
The woman's answer was a terrible one. She raised her veil
|
||
and stepped forward into the light.
|
||
"I wonder if you would bear it," she said.
|
||
It was horrible. No words can describe the framework of a
|
||
face when the face itself is gone. Two living and beautiful brown
|
||
eyes looking sadly out from that grisly ruin did but make the
|
||
view more awful. Holmes held up his hand in a gesture of pity
|
||
and protest, and together we left the room.
|
||
|
||
Two days later, when I called upon my friend, he pointed with
|
||
some pride to a small blue bottle upon his mantelpiece. I picked
|
||
it up. There was a red poison label. A pleasant almondy odour
|
||
rose when I opened it.
|
||
"Prussic acid?" said 1.
|
||
"Exactly. It came by post. 'I send you my temptation. I will
|
||
follow your advice.' That was the message. I think, Watson, we
|
||
can guess the name of the brave woman who sent it."
|
||
|