And now, since last Monday, there has suddenly sprung up a barrier between us, and I find that there is something in her life and in her thought of which I know as little as if she were the woman who brushes by me in the street.
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We are estranged, and I want to know why.
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"Now there is one thing that I want to impress upon you before I go any further, Mr. Holmes.
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Effie loves me.
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Don't let there be any mistake about that.
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She loves me with her whole heart and soul, and never more than now.
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I don't want to argue about that.
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A man can tell easily enough when a woman loves him.
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But there's this secret between us, and we can never be the same until it is cleared."
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"Kindly let me have the facts, Mr. Munro," said Holmes, with some impatience.
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"I'll tell you what I know about Effie's history.
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She was a widow when I met her first, though quite young-only twenty-five.
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Her name then was Mrs. Hebron.
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She went out to America when she was young, and lived in the town of Atlanta, where she married this Hebron, who was a lawyer with a good practice.
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They had one child, but the yellow fever broke out badly in the place, and both husband and child died of it.
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I have seen his death certificate.
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This sickened her of America, and she came back to live with a maiden aunt at Pinner, in Middlesex.
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I may mention that her husband had left her comfortably off, and that she had a capital of about four thousand five hundred pounds, which had been so well invested by him that it returned an average of seven per cent.
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She had only been six months at Pinner when I met her; we fell in love with each other, and we married a few weeks afterwards.
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"I am a hop merchant myself, and as I have an income of seven or eight hundred, we found ourselves comfortably off, and took a nice eighty-pound-a-year villa at Norbury.
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Our little place was very countrified, considering that it is so close to town.
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We had an inn and two houses a little above us, and a single cottage at the other side of the field which faces us, and except those there were no houses until you got half way to the station.
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My business took me into town at certain seasons, but in summer I had less to do, and then in our country home my wife and I were just as happy as could be wished.
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