[A Study In Scarlet by Arthur Conan Doyle]@TWC D-Link bookA Study In Scarlet CHAPTER V 2/22
If ever human features bespoke vice of the most malignant type, they were certainly those of Enoch J.Drebber, of Cleveland.
Still I recognized that justice must be done, and that the depravity of the victim was no condonment [11] in the eyes of the law. The more I thought of it the more extraordinary did my companion's hypothesis, that the man had been poisoned, appear.
I remembered how he had sniffed his lips, and had no doubt that he had detected something which had given rise to the idea.
Then, again, if not poison, what had caused the man's death, since there was neither wound nor marks of strangulation? But, on the other hand, whose blood was that which lay so thickly upon the floor? There were no signs of a struggle, nor had the victim any weapon with which he might have wounded an antagonist.
As long as all these questions were unsolved, I felt that sleep would be no easy matter, either for Holmes or myself.
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