Chapter

1    VIII|  note at once, naming ten o'clock of the following morning.~ ~
2     XIX|     herself alone, the tall clock in her boudoir struck ten,
3   XXIII| hand.~ ~It was about four o'clock in the afternoon. To a good
4    XXVI| blood and fire.~ ~At four o'clock in the afternoon the battle
5  XXVIII|     of late. Toward seven o'clock in the evening he saw a
6  XXVIII| mysterious door in the tall clock at its farther end. The
7  XXVIII|  little key sticking in the clock door, where its rightful
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