more action! 
I have told Holmes, of course, that the Baskerville case must 
be my last with him. I was not well-received when I returned to 
London, having been three weeks in Devonshire, and not the few 
days that I had promised. Mrs. Hudson was very stern with me 
and so was Mrs. Forrester, my beloved's landlady. All was well 
in the end, at Camberwell, when all was explained, and I do think 
that I gained some credit and a most attentive audience when I 
gave an account of my adventures and perils of Dartmoor. The 
ladies gasped most affectingly when I described the Horrors of the
Hound!
I shall miss Baker Street and Holmes even Mrs. Hudson, though I 
intend to spend some pleasant domestic evenings compiling the 
records of previous cases I have shared with Holmes. I cannot 
believe that this is the end of our Association, but I have given 
further promises not to go away again, and I must hold to 
