You have received your rent, and he is not a troublesome lodger, though he is certainly an unusual one.
Voice Reading
He pays you well, and if he chooses to lie concealed it is no direct business of yours.
Voice Reading
We have no excuse for an intrusion upon his privacy until we have some reason to think that there is a guilty reason for it.
Voice Reading
I've taken up the matter, and I won't lose sight of it.
Voice Reading
Report to me if anything fresh occurs, and rely upon my assistance if it should be needed.
Voice Reading
"There are certainly some points of interest in this case, Watson," he remarked when the landlady had left us.
Voice Reading
"It may, of course, be trivial - individual eccentricity; or it may be very much deeper than appears on the surface.
Voice Reading
The first thing that strikes one is the obvious possibility that the person now in the rooms may be entirely different from the one who engaged them."
Voice Reading
"Why should you think so?"
Voice Reading
"Well, apart from this cigarette-end, was it not suggestive that the only time the lodger went out was immediately after his taking the rooms? He came back - or someone came back - when all witnesses were out of the way.
Voice Reading
We have no proof that the person who came back was the person who went out.
Voice Reading
Then, again, the man who took the rooms spoke English well.
Voice Reading
This other, however, prints 'match' when it should have been 'matches.' I can imagine that the word was taken out of a dictionary, which would give the noun but not the plural.
Voice Reading
The laconic style may be to conceal the absence of knowledge of English.
Voice Reading
Yes, Watson, there are good reasons to suspect that there has been a substitution of lodgers."
Voice Reading
"But for what possible end?"
Voice Reading
"Ah! there lies our problem.
Voice Reading
There is one rather obvious line of investigation." He took down the great book in which, day by day, he filed the agony columns of the various London journals.
Voice Reading
"Dear me!" said he, turning over the pages, "what a chorus of groans, cries, and bleatings! What a rag-bag of singular happenings! But surely the most valuable hunting-ground that ever was given to a student of the unusual! This person is alone and cannot be approached by letter without a breach of that absolute secrecy which is desired.
Voice Reading
How is any news or any message to reach him from without? Obviously by advertisement through a newspaper.
Voice Reading
There seems no other way, and fortunately we need concern ourselves with the one paper only.
Voice Reading
Here are the Daily Gazette extracts of the last fortnight.
Voice Reading
Lady with a black boa at Prince's Skating Club' - that we may pass.
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Surely Jimmy will not break his mother's heart' - that appears to be irrelevant.
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If the lady who fainted in the Brixton bus' - she does not interest me.
Voice Reading