There was not a trace of Dr Jekyll, dead or alive. Inside they found Edward Hyde, dead, with a bottle of poison beside him. They broke into Jekyll's laboratory with an axe. He and Poole thought that Jekyll was murdered, and that the murderer was still inside (they heard Hyde's voice). He reported that his master had shut himself up in his laboratory for a week, refusing to show himself and writing curious notes in which he asked the butler to go to all the chemical houses in London and get him certain drugs. Greatly agitated, Dr Jekyll's butler called on Utterson one night. Suddenly some great horror or pain seemed to come upon him and he closed the window abruptly. This explains why Hyde had a key! Looking up they saw Dr Jekyll sitting at a window with a very sad expression on his face. Now they saw that it was an additional wing to Dr Jekyll's house used as a laboratory. One Sunday morning Utterson and Enfield were again walking past the deserted house. Among the papers he left was an envelope addressed to Utterson and containing another envelope marked "Not to be opened till the death or disappearance of Henry Jekyll". Jekyll told him that it was his punishment. Jekyll was like a few years before, but after Utterson had talked to Lanyon, who already knew he wouldn't live much longer, Utterson heard that Jekyll didn't want to see him too often. Utterson shuddered at the thought that Jekyll might be protecting a murderer. Besides, a handwriting expert told him that Hyde's letter was written in a hand identical with that of Jekyll.
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Utterson recognised it as one he had given to Jekyll. He had left the stick with which Sir Danvers had been beaten to death at the scene of the murder. Dr Jekyll showed Utterson and the police a letter signed by Hyde in which he wrote that he was going away forever. Utterson brought the police to Hyde's home in Soho, where they found out that Hyde had disappeared. The maid had seen a man who she recognised as Mr Hyde, who had once visited her master, and whom she did not like. About a year later the old, respected Sir Danvers Carew, a MP and a client of Utterson's, was found murdered. Utterson offers Jekyll to help him with Mr Hyde, but Jekyll says that that is impossible and makes Utterson promise to be fair with Mr Hyde. Utterson spoke to Jekyll when they had dinner together. Utterson began to believe that Hyde was blackmailing Jekyll and might ultimately kill him.
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Jekyll's butler, Poole, told Utterson that Hyde had a key to the laboratory and that he himself had orders to obey Mr Hyde. He then went to Jekyll's house, but Dr Jekyll wasn’t there. Hyde stared at him angrily, but before he disappeared into the house he gave Utterson his address in Soho. He found him in front of the deserted house. Dr Lanyon, who looked very ill and exhausted, said that Dr Jekyll was no longer the man he used to be. It appeared that the relations between the two doctors were severely strained. He first called on Dr Jekyll's lifelong friend, Dr Lanyon. There was also a note that Hyde should take possession immediately in case of Henry Jekyll's "disappearance or unexplained absence for any period exceeding three calendar months". Returning to his house he re-read Jekyll's will, which provided that all Dr Jekyll's possessions were to pass to Edward Hyde. Utterson knew a little about Hyde and Hyde's strange connection with the respectable Dr Jekyll. Enfield and Utterson don't understand how Hyde got the key. The next day they went to the bank and to Enfield's surprise, the cheque was legal. Hide entered the house with a key and came back with a cheque. Enfield and some bystanders had forced the man, who gave his name as Hyde, to pay damages to the child's family. An ugly-looking man, short and a little bit deformed, had collided with a little girl and trampled over her body.
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Mr Enfield told Mr Utterson that one morning he had witnessed a horrible accident at the doorway of the old building. Summary: Mr Utterson, a lawyer, and his cousin, Mr Richard Enfield, were taking their Sunday morning walk in London when they passed a dark, empty house in a narrow street. Read version: 1995, Wolters-Noordhoff, Blackbirds literaire reeks Nr. Title: (The strange case of) Dr Jekyll and Mr.