![]() ![]() He had finally realized that the author possessed a listening device that could detect vibrations from his typewriter keyboard. ![]() He hadn't sent the letter yet, but he didn't have to the new clues often came before the letter was received or even mailed. He responded in Latin, left his answer in the hole in the ribbon tree, and rushed home to tell the author that he was still hot on the trail.Īfterwards, on the way to the pub, he checked the names written on the sides of vans, looking for the author's response. It seemed to be a love letter from a man to another man, but that was only a front. ![]() Ron found nothing in the hole in the tree with the blue ribbon-a blue ribbon just like the one on the Penny-Pockets Lady's apron in the book-but on the bench he found a letter. ![]() Of course, someone could be a heavy drinker of whiskey and lemonade, but everyone knows Idris is an ogre in Welsh mythology, and he plays a harp, and the trash bin was near a bench dedicated to one Fred Harper. There were more in the trash bin, along with bottles of Idris lemonade-when he took them away, they replenished themselves as if by magic. First, he found empty bottles of Haigh whiskey under a hawthorn bush-Haigh, like Haigha, the name of the March Hare in Lewis Carroll. There were more and more signs every time Ron Fletcher went to Rodborough Common. ![]()
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