Paragraph: (Fiction/gutenberg_withoutQuotes/gutenberg-10468-0.txt)
Sent 1: Charlie Mershone had no difficulty in securing his release when Parker came on duty at six o'clock.
Sent 2: He called up a cab and went at once to his rooms at the Bruxtelle; and Fogerty followed him.
Sent 3: While he discarded his dress-coat, took a bath and donned his walking suit Mershone was in a brown study.
Sent 4: Hours ago Louise had been safely landed at the East Orange house and placed in the care of old Madame Cerise, who would guard her like an ogre.
Sent 5: There was no immediate need of his hastening after her, and his arrest and the discovery of half his plot had seriously disturbed him.
Sent 6: This young man was no novice in intrigue, nor even in crime.
Sent 7: Arguing from his own stand-point he realized that the friends of Louise were by this time using every endeavor to locate her.
Sent 8: They would not succeed in this, he was positive.
Sent 9: His plot had been so audacious and all clews so cleverly destroyed or covered up that the most skillful detective, knowing he had abducted the girl; would be completely baffled in an attempt to find her.
Question: Who did Charlie believe were trying and failing to find Louise? (false/0)
Question: What was Charlie wearing at six o'clock? (true/1)
Question: Were Louise and Charlie in the same place? (true/2)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json