<h2 id="id00417" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER VI</h2>
<h5 id="id00418">SIDELIGHTS</h5>
<p id="id00419">The association of coal with potatoes is one upon which I have
frequently speculated, without arriving at any more satisfactory
explanation than that both products are of the earth, earthy. Of the
connection itself Barnard's practise furnished several instances
besides Mrs. Jablett's establishment in Fleur-de-Lys Court, one of
which was a dark and mysterious cavern a foot below the level of the
street, that burrowed under an ancient house on the west side of Fetter
Lane—a crinkly, timber house of the three-decker type that leaned back
drunkenly from the road as if about to sit down in its own back yard.</p>
<p id="id00420">Passing this repository of the associated products about ten o'clock in
the morning, I perceived in the shadows of the cavern no less a person
than Miss Oman. She saw me at the same moment, and beckoned
peremptorily with a hand that held a large Spanish onion. I approached
with a deferential smile.</p>
<p id="id00421">"What a magnificent onion, Miss Oman! and how generous of you to offer
it to me——"</p>
<p id="id00422">"I wasn't offering it to you. But there! Isn't it just like a
man——-"</p>
<p id="id00423">"Isn't what just like a man?" I interrupted. "If you mean the
onion——"</p>
<p id="id00424">"I don't!" she snapped; "and I wish you wouldn't talk such a parcel of
nonsense. A grown man and a member of a serious profession, too! You
ought to know better."</p>
<p id="id00425">"I suppose I ought," I said reflectively. And she continued:</p>
<p id="id00426">"I called in at the surgery just now."</p>
<p id="id00427">"To see me?"</p>
<p id="id00428">"What else should I come for? Do you suppose that I called to consult
the bottle-boy?"</p>
<p id="id00429">"Certainly not, Miss Oman. So you find the lady doctor no use, after
all?"</p>
<p id="id00430">Miss Oman gnashed her teeth at me (and very fine teeth they were too).</p>
<p id="id00431">"I called," she said majestically, "on behalf of Miss Bellingham."</p>
<p id="id00432">My facetiousness evaporated instantly. "I hope Miss Bellingham is not
ill," I said with a sudden anxiety that elicited a sardonic smile from
Miss Oman.</p>
<p id="id00433">"No," was the reply, "she is not ill, but she has cut her hand rather
badly. It's her right hand too, and she can't afford to lose the use
of it, not being a great, bulky, lazy, lolloping man. So you had
better go and put some stuff on it."</p>
<p id="id00434">With this advice, Miss Oman whisked to the right-about and vanished
into the depths of the cavern like the witch of Wokey, while I hurried
on to the surgery to provide myself with the necessary instruments and
materials, and thence proceeded to Nevill's Court.</p>
<p id="id00435">Miss Oman's juvenile maidservant, who opened the door to me, stated the
existing conditions with epigrammatic conciseness.</p>
<p id="id00436">"Mr. Bellingham is hout, sir; but Miss Bellingham is hin."</p>
<p id="id00437">Having thus delivered herself she retreated toward the kitchen and I
ascended the stairs, at the head of which I found Miss Bellingham
awaiting me with her right hand encased in what looked like a white
boxing-glove.</p>
<p id="id00438">"I'm glad you have come," she said. "Phyllis—Miss Oman, you know—has
kindly bound up my hand, but I should like you to see that it is all
right."</p>
<p id="id00439">We went into the sitting-room, where I laid out my paraphernalia on the
table while I inquired into the particulars of the accident.</p>
<p id="id00440">"It is most unfortunate that it should have happened just now," she
said, as I wrestled with one of those remarkable feminine knots that,
while they seem to defy the utmost efforts of human ingenuity to untie,
yet have a singular habit of untying themselves at inopportune moments.</p>
<p id="id00441">"Why just now in particular?" I asked.</p>
<p id="id00442">"Because I have some specially important work to do. A very learned
lady who is writing an historical book has commissioned me to collect
all the literature relating to the Tell-el-Amarna letters—the
cuneiform tablets, you know, of Amenhotep the Fourth."</p>
<p id="id00443">"Well," I said soothingly, "I expect your hand will soon be well."</p>
<p id="id00444">"Yes, but that won't do. The work has to be done immediately. I have
to send in completed notes not later than this day week, and it will be
quite impossible. I am dreadfully disappointed."</p>
<p id="id00445">By this time I had unwound the voluminous wrappings and exposed the
injury—a deep gash in the palm that must have narrowly missed a
good-sized artery. Obviously the hand would be useless for fully a
week.</p>
<p id="id00446">"I suppose," she said, "you couldn't patch it up so that I could write
with it?"</p>
<p id="id00447">I shook my head.</p>
<p id="id00448">"No, Miss Bellingham. I shall have to put it on a splint. We can't
run any risks with a deep wound like this."</p>
<p id="id00449">"Then I shall have to give up the commission, and I don't know how my
client will get the work done in time. You see, I am pretty well up in
the literature of Ancient Egypt; in fact, I was to receive special
payment on that account. And it would have been such an interesting
task, too. However, it can't be helped."</p>
<p id="id00450">I proceeded methodically with the application of the dressings, and
meanwhile reflected. It was evident that she was deeply disappointed.
Loss of work meant loss of money, and it needed but a glance at her
rusty black dress to see that there was little margin for that.
Possibly, too, there was some special need to be met. Her manner
seemed almost to imply that there was. And at this point I had a
brilliant idea.</p>
<p id="id00451">"I'm not sure that it can't be helped," said I.</p>
<p id="id00452">She looked at me inquiringly, and I continued: "I am going to make a
proposition, and I shall ask you to consider it with an open mind."</p>
<p id="id00453">"That sounds rather portentous," said she; "but I promise. What is it?"</p>
<p id="id00454">"It is this: When I was a student I acquired the useful art of writing
shorthand. I am not a lightning reporter, you understand, but I can
take matter down from dictation at quite respectable speed."</p>
<p id="id00455">"Yes."</p>
<p id="id00456">"Well, I have several hours free every day—usually the whole afternoon
up to six or half-past—and it occurs to me that if you were to go to
the Museum in the mornings you could get out your books, look up
passages (you could do that without using your right hand), and put in
bookmarks. Then I could come along in the afternoon and you could read
out the selected passages to me, and I could take them down in
shorthand. We should get through as much in a couple of hours as you
could in a day using long-hand."</p>
<p id="id00457">"Oh, but how kind of you, Dr. Berkeley!" she exclaimed. "How very
kind! Of course, I couldn't think of taking up all your leisure in
that way; but I do appreciate your kindness very much."</p>
<p id="id00458">I was rather chapfallen at this very definite refusal, but persisted
feebly:</p>
<p id="id00459">"I wish you would. It may seem rather a cheek for a comparative
stranger like me to make such a proposal to a lady; but if you'd been a
man—in those special circumstances—I should have made it all the
same, and you would have accepted as a matter of course."</p>
<p id="id00460">"I doubt that. At any rate, I am not a man. I sometimes wish I were."</p>
<p id="id00461">"Oh, I am sure you are much better as you are!" I exclaimed, with such
earnestness that we both laughed. And at this moment Mr. Bellingham
entered the room carrying several large brand-new books in a strap.</p>
<p id="id00462">"Well, I'm sure!" he exclaimed genially; "here are pretty goings on.
Doctor and patient giggling like a pair of schoolgirls! What's the
joke?"</p>
<p id="id00463">He thumped his parcel of books down on the table and listened smilingly
while my unconscious witticism was expounded.</p>
<p id="id00464">"The doctor's quite right," he said. "You'll do as you are, chick; but
the Lord knows what sort of man you would make. You take his advice
and let well alone."</p>
<p id="id00465">Finding him in this genial frame of mind, I ventured to explain my
proposition to him and to enlist his support. He considered it with
attentive approval, and when I had finished turned to his daughter.</p>
<p id="id00466">"What is your objection, chick?" he asked.</p>
<p id="id00467">"It would give Doctor Berkeley such a fearful lot of work," she
answered.</p>
<p id="id00468">"It would give him a fearful lot of pleasure," I said. "It would
really."</p>
<p id="id00469">"Then why not?" said Mr. Bellingham. "We don't mind being under an
obligation to the Doctor, do we?"</p>
<p id="id00470">"Oh, it isn't that!" she exclaimed hastily.</p>
<p id="id00471">"Then take him at his word. He means it. It is a kind action and
he'll like doing it, I'm sure. That's all right, Doctor; she accepts,
don't you, chick?"</p>
<p id="id00472">"Yes, if you say so, I do; and most thankfully."</p>
<p id="id00473">She accompanied the acceptance with a gracious smile that was in itself
a large repayment on account, and when we had made the necessary
arrangements, I hurried away in a state of the most perfect
satisfaction to finish my morning's work and order an early lunch.</p>
<p id="id00474">When I called for her a couple of hours later I found her waiting in
the garden with the shabby handbag, of which I relieved her, and we set
forth together, watched jealously by Miss Oman, who had accompanied her
to the gate.</p>
<p id="id00475">As I walked up the court with this wonderful maid by my side I could
hardly believe in my good fortune. By her presence and my own
resulting happiness the mean surroundings became glorified and the
commonest objects transfigured into things of beauty. What a
delightful thoroughfare, for instance, was Fetter Lane, with its quaint
charm and medieval grace! I snuffed the cabbage-laden atmosphere and
seemed to breathe the scent of the asphodel. Holborn was even as the
Elysian Fields; the omnibus that bore us westward was a chariot of
glory; and the people who swarmed verminously on the pavements bore the
semblance of the children of light.</p>
<p id="id00476">Love is a foolish thing judged by workaday standards, and the thoughts
and actions of lovers foolish beyond measure. But the workaday
standard is the wrong one, after all; for the utilitarian mind does but
busy itself with the trivial and transitory interests of life, behind
which looms the great and everlasting reality of the love of man and
woman. There is more significance in a nightingale's song in the hush
of a summer night than in all the wisdom of Solomon (who, by the way,
was not without his little experiences of the tender passion).</p>
<p id="id00477">The janitor in the little glass box by the entrance to the library
inspected us and passed us on, with a silent benediction, to the lobby,
whence (when I had handed my stick to a bald-headed demigod and
received a talismanic disc in exchange) we entered the enormous rotunda
of the reading-room.</p>
<p id="id00478">I have often thought that, if some lethal vapor of highly preservative
properties—such as formaldehyde, for instance—could be shed into the
atmosphere of this apartment, the entire and complete collection of
books and book-worms would be well worth preserving, for the
enlightenment of posterity, as a sort of anthropological appendix to
the main collection of the Museum. For, surely, nowhere else in the
world are so many strange and abnormal human beings gathered together
in one place. And a curious question that must have occurred to many
observers is: Whence do these singular creatures come, and whither do
they go when the very distinct-faced clock (adjusted to literary
eyesight) proclaims closing time? The tragic-faced gentleman, for
instance, with the corkscrew ringlets that bob up and down like spiral
springs as he walks? Or the short, elderly gentleman in the black
cassock and bowler hat, who shatters your nerves by turning suddenly
and revealing himself as a middle-aged woman? Whither do they go? One
never sees them elsewhere. Do they steal away at closing time into the
depths of the Museum and hide themselves until morning in sarcophagi or
mummy cases? Or do they creep through spaces in the book-shelves and
spend the night behind the volumes in a congenial atmosphere of leather
and antique paper? Who can say? What I do know is that when Ruth
Bellingham entered the reading-room she appeared in comparison with
these like a creature of another order; even as the head of Antinous,
which formerly stood (it has since been moved) amidst the
portrait-busts of the Roman Emperors, seemed like the head of a god set
in a portrait gallery of illustrious baboons.</p>
<p id="id00479">"What have we got to do?" I asked when we had found a vacant seat. "Do
you want to look up the catalogue?"</p>
<p id="id00480">"No, I have the tickets in my bag. The books are waiting in the 'kept
books' department."</p>
<p id="id00481">I placed my hat on the leather-covered shelf, dropped her gloves into
it—how delightfully intimate and companionable it seemed!—altered the
numbers on the tickets, and then we proceeded together to the "kept
books" desk to collect the volumes that contained the material for our
day's work.</p>
<p id="id00482">It was a blissful afternoon. Two and a half hours of happiness
unalloyed did I spend at that shiny, leather-clad desk, guiding my
nimble pen across the pages of the notebook. It introduced me to a new
world—a world in which love and learning, sweet intimacy and crusted
archeology, were mingled into the oddest, most whimsical and most
delicious confection that the mind of man can conceive. Hitherto,
these recondite histories had been far beyond my ken. Of the wonderful
heretic, Amenhotep the Fourth, I had already heard—at the most he had
been a mere name; the Hittites a mythical race of undetermined habitat;
while cuneiform tablets had presented themselves to my mind merely as
an uncouth kind of fossil biscuit suited to the digestion of a
prehistoric ostrich.</p>
<p id="id00483">Now all this was changed. As we sat with our chairs creaking together
and she whispered the story of those stirring times into my receptive
ear—talking is strictly forbidden in the reading-room—the disjointed
fragments arranged themselves into a romance of supreme fascination.
Egyptian, Babylonian, Aramean, Hittite, Memphis, Babylon, Hamath,
Megiddo—I swallowed them all thankfully, wrote them down, and asked
for more. Only once did I disgrace myself. An elderly clergyman of
ascetic and acidulous aspect had passed us with a glance of evident
disapproval, clearly setting us down as intruding philanderers; and
when I contrasted the parson's probable conception of the whispered
communications that were being poured into my ear so tenderly and
confidentially with the dry reality, I chuckled aloud. But my fair
taskmistress only paused, with her finger on the page, smilingly to
rebuke me, and then went on with the dictation. She was certainly a
Tartar for work.</p>
<p id="id00484">It was a proud moment for me when, in response to my interrogative
"Yes?" my companion said "That is all" and closed the book. We had
extracted the pith and marrow of six considerable volumes in two and a
half hours.</p>
<p id="id00485">"You have been better than your word," she said. "It would have taken
me two full days of really hard work to make the notes that you have
written down since we commenced. I don't know how to thank you."</p>
<p id="id00486">"There's no need to. I've enjoyed myself and polished up my shorthand.
What is the next thing? We shall want some books for to-morrow, shan't
we?"</p>
<p id="id00487">"Yes. I have made out a list, so if you will come with me to the
catalogue desk I will look up the numbers and ask you to write the
tickets."</p>
<p id="id00488">The selection of a fresh batch of authorities occupied us for another
quarter of an hour, and then, having handed in the volumes that we had
squeezed dry, we took our way out of the reading-room.</p>
<p id="id00489">"Which way shall we go?" she asked as we passed out of the gate, where
stood a massive policeman, like the guardian angel at the gate of
Paradise (only, thank Heaven! he bore no flaming sword forbidding
re-entry).</p>
<p id="id00490">"We are going," I replied, "to Museum Street, where is a milkshop in
which one can get an excellent cup of tea."</p>
<p id="id00491">She looked as if she would have demurred, but eventually followed
obediently, and we were soon settled side by side at the little
marble-topped table, retracing the ground we had covered in the
afternoon's work and discussing various points of interest over a joint
teapot.</p>
<p id="id00492">"Have you been doing this sort of work long?" I asked, as she handed me
my second cup of tea.</p>
<p id="id00493">"Professionally," she answered, "only about two years; since we broke
up our home, in fact. But long before that I used to come to the
Museum with my Uncle John—the one who disappeared, you know, in that
dreadfully mysterious way—and help him to look up references. We were
good friends, he and I."</p>
<p id="id00494">"I suppose he was a very learned man?" I suggested.</p>
<p id="id00495">"Yes, in a certain way; in the way of the better-class collector he was
very learned indeed. He knew the contents of every museum in the
world, in so far as they were connected with Egyptian antiquities, and
had studied them specimen by specimen. Consequently, as Egyptology is
largely a museum science, he was a learned Egyptologist. But his real
interest was in things rather than events. Of course, he knew a great
deal—a very great deal—about Egyptian history, but still he was,
before all, a collector."</p>
<p id="id00496">"And what will happen to his collection if he is really dead?"</p>
<p id="id00497">"The greater part of it goes to the British Museum by his will, and the
remainder he has left to his solicitor, Mr. Jellicoe."</p>
<p id="id00498">"To Mr. Jellicoe! Why, what will Mr. Jellicoe do with Egyptian
antiquities?"</p>
<p id="id00499">"Oh, he is an Egyptologist too, and quite an enthusiast. He has really
a fine collection of scarabs and other small objects such as it is
possible to keep in a private house. I have always thought that it was
his enthusiasm for everything Egyptian that brought him and my uncle
together on terms of such intimacy; though I believe he is an excellent
lawyer, and he is certainly a very discreet, cautious man."</p>
<p id="id00500">"Is he? I shouldn't have thought so, judging by your uncle's will."</p>
<p id="id00501">"Oh, but that is not Mr. Jellicoe's fault. He assures us that he
entreated my uncle to let him draw up a fresh document with more
reasonable provisions. But he says Uncle John was immovable; and he
really was a rather obstinate man. Mr. Jellicoe repudiates any
responsibility in the matter. He washes his hands of the whole affair,
and says that it is the will of a lunatic. And so it is, I was
glancing through it only a night or two ago, and really I cannot
conceive how a sane man could have written such nonsense."</p>
<p id="id00502">"You have a copy then?" I asked eagerly, remembering Thorndyke's
parting instructions.</p>
<p id="id00503">"Yes. Would you like to see it? I know my father has told you about
it, and it is worth reading as a curiosity of perverseness."</p>
<p id="id00504">"I should very much like to show it to my friend, Doctor Thorndyke," I
replied. "He said he would be interested to read it and learn the
exact provisions; and it might be well to let him, and hear what he has
to say about it."</p>
<p id="id00505">"I see no objection," she rejoined; "but you know what my father is:
his horror, I mean, of what he calls 'cadging for advice gratis.'"</p>
<p id="id00506">"Oh, but he need have no scruples on that score. Doctor Thorndyke
wants to see the will because the case interests him. He is an
enthusiast, you know, and he put the request as a personal favor to
himself."</p>
<p id="id00507">"That is very nice and delicate of him, and I will explain the position
to my father. If he is willing for Doctor Thorndyke to see the copy, I
will send or bring it over this evening. Have we finished?"</p>
<p id="id00508">I regretfully admitted that we had, and, when I had paid the modest
reckoning, we sallied forth, turning back with one accord into Great
Russell Street to avoid the noise and bustle of the larger
thoroughfares.</p>
<p id="id00509">"What sort of man was your uncle?" I asked presently, as we walked
along the quiet, dignified street. And then I added hastily: "I hope
you don't think me inquisitive, but, to my mind, he presents himself as
a kind of mysterious abstraction; the unknown quantity of a legal
problem."</p>
<p id="id00510">"My Uncle John," she answered reflectively, "was a very peculiar man,
rather obstinate, very self-willed, what people call 'masterful,' and
decidedly wrong-headed and unreasonable."</p>
<p id="id00511">"That is certainly the impression that the terms of his will convey," I
said.</p>
<p id="id00512">"Yes, and not the will only. There was the absurd allowance that he
made to my father. That was a ridiculous arrangement, and very unfair
too. He ought to have divided the property up as my grandfather
intended. And yet he was by no means ungenerous, only he would have
his own way, and his own way was very commonly the wrong way."</p>
<p id="id00513">"I remember," she continued, after a short pause, "a very odd instance
of his wrong-headedness and obstinacy. It was a small matter, but very
typical of him. He had in his collection a beautiful little ring of
the eighteenth dynasty. It was said to have belonged to Queen Ti, the
mother of our friend Amenhotep the Fourth; but I don't think that could
have been so, because the device on it was the Eye of Osiris, and Ti,
as you know, was an Aten-worshiper. However, it was a very charming
ring, and Uncle John, who had a queer sort of devotion to the mystical
eye of Osiris, commissioned a very clever goldsmith to make two exact
copies of it, one for himself and one for me. The goldsmith naturally
wanted to take the measurements of our fingers, but this Uncle John
would not hear of; the rings were to be exact copies, and an exact copy
must be the same size as the original. You can imagine the result; my
ring was so loose that I couldn't keep it in my finger, and Uncle
John's was so tight that though he did manage to get it on, he was
never able to get it off. And it was only the circumstance that his
left hand was decidedly smaller than his right that made it possible
for him to wear it all."</p>
<p id="id00514">"So you never wore your copy?"</p>
<p id="id00515">"No. I wanted to have it altered to make it fit, but he objected
strongly; so I put it away, and have it in a box still."</p>
<p id="id00516">"He must have been an extraordinarily pig-headed old fellow," I
remarked.</p>
<p id="id00517">"Yes; he was very tenacious. He annoyed my father a good deal, too, by
making unnecessary alterations in the house in Queen Square when he
fitted up his museum. We have a certain sentiment with regard to that
house. Our people have lived in it ever since it was built, when the
square was first laid out in the reign of Queen Anne, after whom it was
named. It is a dear old house. Would you like to see it? We are
quite near it now."</p>
<p id="id00518">I assented eagerly. If it had been a coal-shed or a fried-fish shop I
would still have visited it with pleasure, for the sake of prolonging
our walk; but I was also really interested in this old house as a part
of the background of the mystery of the vanished John Bellingham.</p>
<p id="id00519">We crossed into Cosmo Place, with its quaint row of the now rare,
cannon-shaped iron posts, and passing through stood for a few moments
looking into the peaceful, stately old square. A party of boys
disported themselves noisily on the range of stone posts that form a
bodyguard round the ancient lamp-surmounted pump, but otherwise the
place was wrapped in dignified repose suited to its age and station.
And very pleasant it looked on this summer afternoon with the sunlight
gilding the foliage of its widespreading plane trees and lighting up
the warm-toned brick of the house-fronts. We walked slowly down the
shady west side, near the middle of which my companion halted.</p>
<p id="id00520">"This is the house," she said. "It looks gloomy and forsaken now; but
it must have been a delightful house in the days when my ancestors
could look out of the windows through the open end of the square across
the fields of meadows to the heights of Hampstead and Highgate."</p>
<p id="id00521">She stood at the edge of the pavement looking up with a curious
wistfulness at the old house; a very pathetic figure I thought, with
her handsome face and proud carriage, her threadbare dress and shabby
gloves, standing at the threshold of the home that had been her
family's for generations, that should now have been hers, and that was
shortly to pass away into the hands of strangers.</p>
<p id="id00522">I, too, looked up at it with a strange interest, impressed by something
gloomy and forbidding in its aspect. The windows were shuttered from
basement to attic, and no sign of life was visible. Silent, neglected,
desolate, it breathed an air of tragedy. It seemed to mourn in
sackcloth and ashes for its lost master. The massive door within the
splendid carven portico was crusted with grime, and seemed to have
passed out of use as completely as the ancient lamp-irons or the rusted
extinguishers wherein the footmen were wont to quench their torches
when some Bellingham dame was borne up the steps in her gilded chair,
in the days of good Queen Anne.</p>
<p id="id00523">It was in a somewhat sobered frame of mind that we presently turned
away and started homeward by way of Great Ormond Street. My companion
was deeply thoughtful, relapsing for a while into that somberness of
manner that had so impressed me when I first met her. Nor was I
without a certain sympathetic pensiveness; as if, from the great,
silent house, the spirit of the vanished man had issued forth to bear
us company.</p>
<p id="id00524">But still it was a delightful walk, and I was sorry when at last we
arrived at the entrance to Nevill's Court, and Miss Bellingham halted
and held out her hand.</p>
<p id="id00525">"Good-by," she said; "and many, many thanks for your invaluable help.<br/>
Shall I take the bag?"<br/></p>
<p id="id00526">"If you want it. But I must take out the notebooks."</p>
<p id="id00527">"Why must you take them?" she asked.</p>
<p id="id00528">"Why, haven't I got to copy the notes out into long-hand?"</p>
<p id="id00529">An expression of utter consternation spread over her face; in fact, she
was so completely taken aback that she forgot to release my hand.</p>
<p id="id00530">"Heavens!" she exclaimed. "How idiotic of me! But it is impossible,<br/>
Doctor Berkeley! It will take you hours!"<br/></p>
<p id="id00531">"It is perfectly possible, and it is going to be done; otherwise the
notes would be useless. Do you want the bag?"</p>
<p id="id00532">"No, of course not. But I am positively appalled. Hadn't you better
give up the idea?"</p>
<p id="id00533">"And this is the end of our collaboration?" I exclaimed tragically,
giving her hand a final squeeze (whereby she became suddenly aware of
its position, and withdrew it rather hastily). "Would you throw away a
whole afternoon's work? I won't certainly; so, good-by until
to-morrow. I shall turn up in the reading-room as early as I can. You
had better take the tickets. Oh, and you won't forget about the copy
of the will for Doctor Thorndyke, will you?"</p>
<p id="id00534">"No; if my father agrees, you shall have it this evening."</p>
<p id="id00535">She took the tickets from me, and, thanking me yet again, retired into
the court.</p>
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