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"What!" Lestrade stared at him in amazement. "You are joking." Voice Reading
"I was never more serious in my life. A shocking crime has been committed, and I think I have now laid bare every detail of it." Voice Reading
"And the criminal?" Voice Reading
Holmes scribbled a few words upon the back of one of his visiting cards and threw it over to Lestrade. Voice Reading
"That is the name," he said. Voice Reading
"You cannot effect an arrest until to-morrow night at the earliest. Voice Reading
I should prefer that you do not mention my name at all in connection with the case, as I choose to be only associated with those crimes which present some difficulty in their solution. Voice Reading
Come on, Watson." We strode off together to the station, leaving Lestrade still staring with a delighted face at the card which Holmes had thrown him. Voice Reading
"The case," said Sherlock Holmes as we chatted over our cigars that night in our rooms at Baker Street, "is one where, as in the investigations which you have chronicled under the names of 'A Study in Scarlet' and of 'The Sign of Four,' we have been compelled to reason backward from effects to causes. Voice Reading
I have written to Lestrade asking him to supply us with the details which are now wanting, and which he will only get after he has secured his man. Voice Reading
That he may be safely trusted to do, for although he is absolutely devoid of reason, he is as tenacious as a bulldog when he once understands what he has to do, and, indeed, it is just this tenacity which has brought him to the top at Scotland Yard." Voice Reading
"Your case is not complete, then?" I asked. Voice Reading
"It is fairly complete in essentials. We know who the author of the revolting business is, although one of the victims still escapes us. Of course, you have formed your own conclusions." Voice Reading
"I presume that this Jim Browner, the steward of a Liverpool boat, is the man whom you suspect?" Voice Reading
"Oh! it is more than a suspicion." Voice Reading
"And yet I cannot see anything save very vague indications." Voice Reading
"On the contrary, to my mind nothing could be more clear. Voice Reading
Let me run over the principal steps. Voice Reading
We approached the case, you remember, with an absolutely blank mind, which is always an advantage. Voice Reading
We had formed no theories. Voice Reading
We were simply there to observe and to draw inferences from our observations. Voice Reading
What did we see first? A very placid and respectable lady, who seemed quite innocent of any secret, and a portrait which showed me that she had two younger sisters. Voice Reading
It instantly flashed across my mind that the box might have been meant for one of these. Voice Reading
I set the idea aside as one which could be disproved or confirmed at our leisure. Voice Reading
Then we went to the garden, as you remember, and we saw the very singular contents of the little yellow box. Voice Reading

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