<h1><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</SPAN></h1>
<h2><i>Alice's Performances</i></h2>
<p>When Alice was called, and when she stood up in the box, and, smiling
indulgently at the doddering usher, kissed the book as if it had been a
chubby nephew, a change came over the emotional atmosphere of the court,
which felt a natural need to smile. Alice was in all her best clothes, but
it cannot be said that she looked the wife of a super-eminent painter. In
answer to a question she stated that before marrying Priam she was the
widow of a builder in a small way of business, well known in Putney and
also in Wandsworth. This was obviously true. She could have been nothing
but the widow of a builder in a small way of business well known in Putney
and also in Wandsworth. She was every inch that.</p>
<p>"How did you first meet your present husband, Mrs. Leek?" asked Mr.
Crepitude.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Farll, if you please," she cheerfully corrected him.</p>
<p>"Well, Mrs. Farll, then."</p>
<p>"I must say," she remarked conversationally, "it seems queer you should
be calling me Mrs. Leek, when they're paying you to prove that I'm Mrs.
Farll, Mr.----, excuse me, I forget your name."</p>
<p>This nettled Crepitude, K.C. It nettled him, too, merely to see a
witness standing in the box just as if she were standing in her kitchen
talking to a tradesman at the door. He was not accustomed to such a
spectacle. And though Alice was his own witness he was angry with her
because he was angry with her husband. He blushed. Juniors behind him could
watch the blush creeping like a tide round the back of his neck over his
exceedingly white collar.</p>
<p>"If you'll be good enough to reply----" said he.</p>
<p>"I met my husband outside St. George's Hall, by appointment," said
she.</p>
<p>"But before that. How did you make his acquaintance?"</p>
<p>"Through a matrimonial agency," said she.</p>
<p>"Oh!" observed Crepitude, and decided that he would not pursue that
avenue. The fact was Alice had put him into the wrong humour for making the
best of her. She was, moreover, in a very difficult position, for Priam had
positively forbidden her to have any speech with solicitors' clerks or with
solicitors, and thus Crepitude knew not what pitfalls for him her evidence
might contain. He drew from her an expression of opinion that her husband
was the real Priam Farll, but she could give no reasons in support--did not
seem to conceive that reasons in support were necessary.</p>
<p>"Has your husband any moles?" asked Crepitude suddenly.</p>
<p>"Any what?" demanded Alice, leaning forward.</p>
<p>Vodrey, K.C., sprang up.</p>
<p>"I submit to your lordship that my learned friend is putting a leading
question," said Vodrey, K.C.</p>
<p>"Mr. Crepitude," said the judge, "can you not phrase your questions
differently?"</p>
<p>"Has your husband any birthmarks--er--on his body?" Crepitude tried
again.</p>
<p>"Oh! <i>Moles</i>, you said? You needn't be afraid. Yes, he's got two
moles, close together on his neck, here." And she pointed amid silence to
the exact spot. Then, noticing the silence, she added, "That's all that I
<i>know</i> of."</p>
<p>Crepitude resolved to end his examination upon this impressive note, and
he sat down. And Alice had Vodrey, K.C., to face.</p>
<p>"You met your husband through a matrimonial agency?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Who first had recourse to the agency?"</p>
<p>"I did."</p>
<p>"And what was your object?"</p>
<p>"I wanted to find a husband, of course," she smiled. "What <i>do</i>
people go to matrimonial agencies for?"</p>
<p>"You aren't here to put questions to me," said Vodrey severely.</p>
<p>"Well," she said, "I should have thought you would have known what
people went to matrimonial agencies for. Still, you live and learn." She
sighed cheerfully.</p>
<p>"Do you think a matrimonial agency is quite the nicest way of----"</p>
<p>"It depends what you mean by 'nice,'" said Alice.</p>
<p>"Womanly."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Alice shortly, "I do. If you're going to stand there and
tell me I'm unwomanly, all I have to say is that you're unmanly."</p>
<p>"You say you first met your husband outside St George's Hall?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Never seen him before?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"How did you recognize him?"</p>
<p>"By his photograph."</p>
<p>"Oh, he'd sent you his photograph?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"With a letter?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"In what name was the letter signed?"</p>
<p>"Henry Leek."</p>
<p>"Was that before or after the death of the man who was buried in
Westminster Abbey?"</p>
<p>"A day or two before." (Sensation in court.)</p>
<p>"So that your present husband was calling himself Henry Leek before the
death?"</p>
<p>"No, he wasn't. That letter was written by the man that died. My husband
found my reply to it, and my photograph, in the man's bag afterwards; and
happening to be strolling past St. George's Hall just at the moment
like--"</p>
<p>"Well, happening to be strolling past St. George's Hall just at the
moment like--" (Titters.)</p>
<p>"I caught sight of him and spoke to him. You see, I thought then that he
was the man who wrote the letter."</p>
<p>"What made you think so?"</p>
<p>"I had the photograph."</p>
<p>"So that the man who wrote the letter and died didn't send his own
photograph. He sent another photograph--the photograph of your
husband?"</p>
<p>"Yes, didn't you know that? I should have thought you'd have known
that."</p>
<p>"Do you really expect the jury to believe that tale?"</p>
<p>Alice turned smiling to the jury. "No," she said, "I'm not sure as I do.
I didn't believe it myself for a long time. But it's true."</p>
<p>"Then at first you didn't believe your husband was the real Priam
Farll?"</p>
<p>"No. You see, he didn't exactly tell me like. He only sort of
hinted."</p>
<p>"But you didn't believe?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"You thought he was lying?"</p>
<p>"No, I thought it was just a kind of an idea he had. You know my husband
isn't like other gentlemen."</p>
<p>"I imagine not," said Vodrey. "Now, when did you come to be perfectly
sure that, your husband was the real Priam Farll?"</p>
<p>"It was the night of that day when Mr. Oxford came down to see him. He
told me all about it then."</p>
<p>"Oh! That day when Mr. Oxford paid him five hundred pounds?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Immediately Mr. Oxford paid him five hundred pounds you were ready to
believe that your husband was the real Priam Farll. Doesn't that strike you
as excessively curious?"</p>
<p>"It's just how it happened," said Alice blandly.</p>
<p>"Now about these moles. You pointed to the right side of your neck. Are
you sure they aren't on the left side?"</p>
<p>"Let me think now," said Alice, frowning. "When he's shaving in a
morning--he get up earlier now than he used to--I can see his face in the
looking-glass, and in the looking-glass the moles are on the left side. So
on <i>him</i> they must be on the right side. Yes, the right side. That's
it."</p>
<p>"Have you never seen them except in a mirror, my good woman?"
interpolated the judge.</p>
<p>For some reason Alice flushed. "I suppose you think that's funny," she
snapped, slightly tossing her head.</p>
<p>The audience expected the roof to fall. But the roof withstood the
strain, thanks to a sagacious deafness on the part of the judge. If,
indeed, he had not been visited by a sudden deafness, it is difficult to
see how he would have handled the situation.</p>
<p>"Have you any idea," Vodrey inquired, "why your husband refuses to
submit his neck to the inspection of the court?"</p>
<p>"I didn't know he had refused."</p>
<p>"But he has."</p>
<p>"Well," said Alice, "if you hadn't turned me out of the court while he
was being examined, perhaps I could have told you. But I can't as it is. So
it serves you right."</p>
<p>Thus ended Alice's performances.</p>
<h2><i>The Public Captious</i></h2>
<p>The court rose, and another six or seven hundred pounds was gone into
the pockets of the celebrated artistes engaged. It became at once obvious,
from the tone of the evening placards and the contents of evening papers,
and the remarks in crowded suburban trains, that for the public the trial
had resolved itself into an affair of moles. Nothing else now interested
the great and intelligent public. If Priam had those moles on his neck,
then he was the real Priam. If he had not, then he was a common cheat. The
public had taken the matter into its own hands. The sturdy common sense of
the public was being applied to the affair. On the whole it may be said
that the sturdy common sense of the public was against Priam. For the
majority, the entire story was fishily preposterous. It must surely be
clear to the feeblest brain that if Priam possessed moles he would expose
them. The minority, who talked of psychology and the artistic temperament,
were regarded as the cousins of Little Englanders and the direct
descendants of pro-Boers.</p>
<p>Still, the thing ought to be proved or disproved.</p>
<p>Why didn't the judge commit him for contempt of court? He would then be
sent to Holloway and be compelled to strip--and there you were!</p>
<p>Or why didn't Oxford hire some one to pick a quarrel with him in the
street and carry the quarrel to blows, with a view to raiment-tearing?</p>
<p>A nice thing, English justice--if it had no machinery to force a man to
show his neck to a jury! But then English justice <i>was</i> notoriously
comic.</p>
<p>And whole trainfuls of people sneered at their country's institution in
a manner which, had it been adopted by a foreigner, would have plunged
Europe into war and finally tested the blue-water theory. Undoubtedly the
immemorial traditions of English justice came in for very severe handling,
simply because Priam would not take his collar off.</p>
<p>And he would not.</p>
<p>The next morning there were consultations in counsel's rooms, and the
common law of the realm was ransacked to find a legal method of inspecting
Priam's moles, without success. Priam arrived safely at the courts with his
usual high collar, and was photographed thirty times between the kerb and
the entrance hall.</p>
<p>"He's slept in it!" cried wags.</p>
<p>"Bet yer two ter one it's a clean 'un!" cried other wags. "His missus
gets his linen up."</p>
<p>It was subject to such indignities that the man who had defied the
Supreme Court of Judicature reached his seat in the theatre. When
solicitors and counsel attempted to reason with him, he answered with
silence. The rumour ran that in his hip pocket he was carrying a revolver
wherewith to protect the modesty of his neck.</p>
<p>The celebrated artistes, having perceived the folly of losing six or
seven hundred pounds a day because Priam happened to be an obstinate idiot,
continued with the case. For Mr. Oxford and another army of experts of
European reputation were waiting to prove that the pictures admittedly
painted after the burial in the National Valhalla, were painted by Priam
Farll, and could have been painted by no other. They demonstrated this by
internal evidence. In other words, they proved by deductions from squares
of canvas that Priam had moles on his neck. It was a phenomenon eminently
legal. And Priam, in his stiff collar, sat and listened. The experts,
however, achieved two feats, both unintentionally. They sent the judge
soundly to sleep, and they wearied the public, which considered that the
trial was falling short of its early promise. This <i>expertise</i> went on
to the extent of two whole days and appreciably more than another thousand
pounds. And on the third day Priam, somewhat hardened to renown, reappeared
with his mysterious neck, and more determined than ever. He had seen in a
paper, which was otherwise chiefly occupied with moles and experts, a
cautious statement that the police had collected the necessary
<i>primâ facie</i> evidence of bigamy, and that his arrest was
imminent. However, something stranger than arrest for bigamy happened to
him.</p>
<h2><i>New Evidence</i></h2>
<p>The principal King's Bench corridor in the Law Courts, like the other
main corridors, is a place of strange meetings and interviews. A man may
receive there a bit of news that will change the whole of the rest of his
life, or he may receive only an invitation to a mediocre lunch in the
restaurant underneath; he never knows beforehand. Priam assuredly did not
receive an invitation to lunch. He was traversing the crowded
thoroughfares--for with the exception of match and toothpick sellers the
corridor has the characteristics of a Strand pavement in the forenoon--when
he caught sight of Mr. Oxford talking to a woman. Now, he had exchanged no
word with Mr. Oxford since the historic scene in the club, and he was
determined to exchange no word; however, they had not gone through the
formality of an open breach. The most prudent thing to do, therefore, was
to turn and take another corridor. And Priam would have fled, being capable
of astonishing prudence when prudence meant the avoidance of unpleasant
encounters; but, just as he was turning, the woman in conversation with Mr.
Oxford saw him, and stepped towards him with the rapidity of thought,
holding forth her hand. She was tall, thin, and stiffly distinguished in
the brusque, Dutch-doll motions of her limbs. Her coat and skirt were quite
presentable; but her feet were large (not her fault, of course, though one
is apt to treat large feet as a crime), and her feathered hat was even
larger. She hid her age behind a veil.</p>
<p>"How do you do, Mr. Farll?" she addressed him firmly, in a voice which
nevertheless throbbed.</p>
<p>It was Lady Sophia Entwistle.</p>
<p>"How do you do?" he said, taking her offered hand.</p>
<p>There was nothing else to do, and nothing else to say.</p>
<p>Then Mr. Oxford put out his hand.</p>
<p>"How do you do, Mr. Farll?"</p>
<p>And, taking Mr. Oxford's hated hand, Priam said again, "How do you
do?"</p>
<p>It was all just as if there had been no past; the past seemed to have
been swallowed up in the ordinariness of the crowded corridor. By all the
rules for the guidance of human conduct, Lady Sophia ought to have
denounced Priam with outstretched dramatic finger to the contempt of the
world as a philanderer with the hearts of trusting women; and he ought to
have kicked Mr. Oxford along the corridor for a scheming Hebrew. But they
merely shook hands and asked each other how they did, not even expecting an
answer. This shows to what extent the ancient qualities of the race have
deteriorated.</p>
<p>Then a silence.</p>
<p>"I suppose you know, Mr. Farll," said Lady Sophia, rather suddenly,
"that I have got to give evidence in this case."</p>
<p>"No," he said, "I didn't."</p>
<p>"Yes, it seems they have scoured all over the Continent in vain to find
people who knew you under your proper name, and who could identify you with
certainty, and they couldn't find one--doubtless owing to your peculiar
habits of travel."</p>
<p>"Really," said Priam.</p>
<p>He had made love to this woman. He had kissed her. They had promised to
marry each other. It was a piece of wild folly on his part; but, in the
eyes of an impartial person, folly could not excuse his desertion of her,
his flight from her intellectual charms. His gaze pierced her veil. No, she
was not quite so old as Alice. She was not more plain than Alice. She
certainly knew more than Alice. She could talk about pictures without
sticking a knife into his soul and turning it in the wound. She was better
dressed than Alice. And her behaviour on the present occasion, candid,
kind, correct, could not have been surpassed by Alice. And yet... Her
demeanour was without question prodigiously splendid in its ignoring of all
that she had gone through. And yet... Even in that moment of complicated
misery he had enough strength to hate her because he had been fool enough
to make love to her. No excuse whatever for him, of course!</p>
<p>"I was in India when I first heard of this case," Lady Sophia continued.
"At first I thought it must be a sort of Tichborne business over again.
Then, knowing you as I did, I thought perhaps it wasn't."</p>
<p>"And as Lady Sophia happens to be in London now," put in Mr. Oxford,
"she is good enough to give her invaluable evidence on my behalf."</p>
<p>"That is scarcely the way to describe it," said Lady Sophia coldly. "I
am only here because you compel me to be here by subpoena. It is all due to
your acquaintanceship with my aunt."</p>
<p>"Quite so, quite so!" Mr. Oxford agreed. "It naturally can't be very
agreeable to you to have to go into the witness-box and submit to
cross-examination. Certainly not. And I am the more obliged to you for your
kindness, Lady Sophia."</p>
<p>Priam comprehended the situation. Lady Sophia, after his supposed death,
had imparted to relatives the fact of his engagement, and the unscrupulous
scoundrel, Mr. Oxford, had got hold of her and was forcing her to give
evidence for him. And after the evidence, the joke of every man in the
street would be to the effect that Priam Farll, rather than marry the
skinny spinster, had pretended to be dead.</p>
<p>"You see," Mr. Oxford added to him, "the important point about Lady
Sophia's evidence is that in Paris she saw both you and your valet--the
valet obviously a servant, and you obviously his master. There can,
therefore, be no question of her having been deceived by the valet posing
as the master. It is a most fortunate thing that by a mere accident I got
on the tracks of Lady Sophia in time. In the nick of time. Only yesterday
afternoon!"</p>
<p>No reference by Mr. Oxford to Priam's obstinacy in the matter of
collars. He appeared to regard Priam's collar as a phenomenon of nature,
such as the weather, or a rock in the sea, as something to be accepted with
resignation! No sign of annoyance with Priam! He was the prince of
diplomatists, was Mr. Oxford.</p>
<p>"Can I speak to you a minute?" said Lady Sophia to Priam.</p>
<p>Mr. Oxford stepped away with a bow.</p>
<p>And Lady Sophia looked steadily at Priam. He had to admit again that she
was stupendous. She was his capital mistake; but she was stupendous.</p>
<p>At their last interview he had embraced her. She had attended his
funeral in Westminster Abbey. And she could suppress all that from her
eyes! She could stand there calm and urbane in her acceptance of the
terrific past. Apparently she forgave.</p>
<p>Said Lady Sophia simply, "Now, Mr. Farll, shall I have to give evidence
or not? You know it depends on you?"</p>
<p>The casualness of her tone was sublime; it was heroic; it made her feet
small.</p>
<p>He had sworn to himself that he would be cut in pieces before he would
aid the unscrupulous Mr. Oxford by removing his collar in presence of those
dramatic artistes. He had been grossly insulted, disturbed, maltreated, and
exploited. The entire world had meddled with his private business, and he
would be cut in pieces before he would display those moles which would
decide the issue in an instant.</p>
<p>Well, she had cut him in pieces.</p>
<p>"Please don't worry," said he in reply. "I will attend to things."</p>
<p>At that moment Alice, who had followed him by a later train,
appeared.</p>
<p>"Good-morning, Lady Sophia," he said, raising his hat, and left her.</p>
<h2><i>Thoughts on Justice</i></h2>
<p>"Farll takes his collar off." "Witt <i>v</i>. Parfitts. Result." These
and similar placards flew in the Strand breezes. Never in the history of
empires had the removal of a starched linen collar (size 16-1/2) created
one-thousandth part of the sensation caused by the removal of this collar.
It was an epoch-making act. It finished the drama of Witt <i>v</i>.
Parfitts. The renowned artistes engaged did not, of course, permit the case
to collapse at once. No, it had to be concluded slowly and majestically,
with due forms and expenses. New witnesses (such as doctors) had to be
called, and old ones recalled. Duncan Farll, for instance, had to be
recalled, and if the situation was ignominious for Priam it was also
ignominious for Duncan. Duncan's sole advantage in his defeat was that the
judge did not skin him alive in the summing up, nor the jury in their
verdict. England breathed more freely when the affair was finally over and
the renowned artistes engaged had withdrawn enveloped in glory. The truth
was that England, so proud of her systems, had had a fright. Her judicial
methods had very nearly failed to make a man take his collar off in public.
They had really failed, but it had all come right in the end, and so
England pretended that they had only just missed failing. A grave injustice
would have been perpetrated had Priam chosen not to take off his collar.
People said, naturally, that imprisonment for bigamy would have included
the taking-off of collars; but then it was rumoured that prosecution for
bigamy had not by any means been a certainty, as since leaving the box Mrs.
Henry Leek had wavered in her identification. However, the justice of
England had emerged safely. And it was all very astounding and shocking and
improper. And everybody was exceedingly wise after the event. And with one
voice the press cried that something painful ought to occur at once to
Priam Farll, no matter how great an artist he was.</p>
<p>The question was: How could Priam be trapped in the net of the law? He
had not committed bigamy. He had done nothing. He had only behaved in a
negative manner. He had not even given false information to the registrar.
And Dr. Cashmore could throw no light on the episode, for he was dead. His
wife and daughters had at last succeeded in killing him. The judge had
intimated that the ecclesiastical wrath of the Dean and Chapter might
speedily and terribly overtake Priam Farll; but that sounded vague and
unsatisfactory to the lay ear.</p>
<p>In short, the matter was the most curious that ever was. And for the
sake of the national peace of mind, the national dignity, and the national
conceit, it was allowed to drop into forgetfulness after a few days. And
when the papers announced that, by Priam's wish, the Farll museum was to be
carried to completion and formally conveyed to the nation, despite all, the
nation decided to accept that honourable amend, and went off to the seaside
for its annual holiday.</p>
<h2><i>The Will to Live</i></h2>
<p>Alice insisted on it, and so, immediately before their final departure
from England, they went. Priam pretended that the visit was undertaken
solely to please her; but the fact is that his own morbid curiosity moved
in the same direction. They travelled by an omnibus past the Putney Empire
and the Walham Green Empire as far as Walham Green, and there changed into
another one which carried them past the Chelsea Empire, the Army and Navy
Stores, and the Hotel Windsor to the doors of Westminster Abbey. And they
vanished out of the October sunshine into the beam-shot gloom of Valhalla.
It was Alice's first view of Valhalla, though of course she had heard of
it. In old times she had visited Madame Tussaud's and the Tower, but she
had not had leisure to get round as far as Valhalla. It impressed her
deeply. A verger pointed them to the nave; but they dared not demand more
minute instructions. They had not the courage to ask for <i>It</i>. Priam
could not speak. There were moments with him when he could not speak lest
his soul should come out of his mouth and flit irrecoverably away. And he
could not find the tomb. Save for the outrageous tomb of mighty Newton, the
nave seemed to be as naked as when it came into the world. Yet he was sure
he was buried in the nave--and only three years ago, too! Astounding, was
it not, what could happen in three years? He knew that the tomb had not
been removed, for there had been an article in the <i>Daily Record</i> on
the previous day asking in the name of a scandalized public whether the
Dean and Chapter did not consider that three months was more than long
enough for the correction of a fundamental error in the burial department.
He was gloomy; he had in truth been somewhat gloomy ever since the trial.
Perhaps it was the shadow of the wrath of the Dean and Chapter on him. He
had ceased to procure joy in the daily manifestations of life in the
streets of the town. And this failure to discover the tomb intensified the
calm, amiable sadness which distinguished him.</p>
<p>Alice, gazing around, chiefly with her mouth, inquired suddenly--</p>
<p>"What's that printing there?"</p>
<p>She had detected a legend incised on one of the small stone flags which
form the vast floor of the nave. They stooped over it. "PRIAM FARLL," it
said simply, in fine Roman letters and then his dates. That was all. Near
by, on other flags, they deciphered other names of honour. This austere
method of marking the repose of the dead commended itself to him, caused
him to feel proud of himself and of the ridiculous England that somehow
keeps our great love. His gloom faded. And do you know what idea rushed
from his heart to his brain? "By Jove! I will paint finer pictures than any
I've done yet!" And the impulse to recommence the work of creation surged
over him. The tears started to his eyes.</p>
<p>"I like that!" murmured Alice, gazing at the stone. "I do think that's
nice."</p>
<p>And <i>he</i> said, because he truly felt it, because the will to live
raged through him again, tingling and smarting:</p>
<p>"I'm glad I'm not there."</p>
<p>They smiled at each other, and their instinctive hands fumblingly
met.</p>
<p>A few days later, the Dean and Chapter, stung into action by the
majestic rebuke of the <i>Daily Record</i>, amended the floor of Valhalla
and caused the mortal residuum of the immortal organism known as Henry Leek
to be nocturnally transported to a different bed.</p>
<h2><i>On Board</i></h2>
<p>A few days later, also, a North German Lloyd steamer quitted Southampton
for Algiers, bearing among its passengers Priam and Alice. It was a rough
starlit night, and from the stern of the vessel the tumbled white water
made a pathway straight to receding England. Priam had come to love the
slopes of Putney with the broad river at the foot; but he showed what I
think was a nice feeling in leaving England. His sojourn in our land had
not crowned him with brilliance. He was not a being created for society,
nor for cutting a figure, nor for exhibiting tact and prudence in the
crises of existence. He could neither talk well nor read well, nor express
himself in exactly suitable actions. He could only express himself at the
end of a brush. He could only paint extremely beautiful pictures. That was
the major part of his vitality. In minor ways he may have been, upon
occasions, a fool. But he was never a fool on canvas. He said everything
there, and said it to perfection, for those who could read, for those who
can read, and for those who will be able to read five hundred years hence.
Why expect more from him? Why be disappointed in him? One does not expect a
wire-walker to play fine billiards. You yourself, mirror of prudence that
you are, would have certainly avoided all Priam's manifold errors in the
conduct of his social career; but, you see, he was divine in another
way.</p>
<p>As the steamer sped along the lengthening pathway from England, one
question kept hopping in and out of his mind:</p>
<p>"<i>I wonder what they'll do with me next time</i>?"</p>
<p>Do not imagine that he and Alice were staring over the stern at the
singular isle. No! There were imperative reasons, which affected both of
them, against that. It was only in the moments of the comparative calm
which always follows insurrections, that Priam had leisure to wonder, and
to see his own limitations, and joyfully to meditate upon the prospect of
age devoted to the sole doing of that which he could so supremely, in a
sweet exile with the enchantress, Alice.</p>
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