| Project Gutenberg's Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle |
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| Title: Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes |
| |
| Author: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle |
| |
| Posting Date: July 31, 2008 [EBook #834] |
| Release Date: March, 1997 |
| [This file last updated on August 16, 2010] |
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| Language: English |
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| *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEMOIRS OF SHERLOCK HOLMES *** |
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| Produced by Angela M. Cable |
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| MEMOIRS OF SHERLOCK HOLMES |
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| by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle |
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| Adventure I. Silver Blaze |
| |
| |
| "I am afraid, Watson, that I shall have to go," said Holmes, as we sat |
| down together to our breakfast one morning. |
| |
| "Go! Where to?" |
| |
| "To Dartmoor; to King's Pyland." |
| |
| I was not surprised. Indeed, my only wonder was that he had not already |
| been mixed up in this extraordinary case, which was the one topic of |
| conversation through the length and breadth of England. For a whole day |
| my companion had rambled about the room with his chin upon his chest and |
| his brows knitted, charging and recharging his pipe with the strongest |
| black tobacco, and absolutely deaf to any of my questions or remarks. |
| Fresh editions of every paper had been sent up by our news agent, only |
| to be glanced over and tossed down into a corner. Yet, silent as he was, |
| I knew perfectly well what it was over which he was brooding. There was |
| but one problem before the public which could challenge his powers of |
| analysis, and that was the singular disappearance of the favorite for |
| the Wessex Cup, and the tragic murder of its trainer. When, therefore, |
| he suddenly announced his intention of setting out for the scene of the |
| drama it was only what I had both expected and hoped for. |
| |
| "I should be most happy to go down with you if I should not be in the |
| way," said I. |
| |
| "My dear Watson, you would confer a great favor upon me by coming. And |
| I think that your time will not be misspent, for there are points about |
| the case which promise to make it an absolutely unique one. We have, I |
| think, just time to catch our train at Paddington, and I will go further |
| into the matter upon our journey. You would oblige me by bringing with |
| you your very excellent field-glass." |
| |
| And so it happened that an hour or so later I found myself in the |
| corner of a first-class carriage flying along en route for Exeter, while |
| Sherlock Holmes, with his sharp, eager face framed in his ear-flapped |
| travelling-cap, dipped rapidly into the bundle of fresh papers which he |
| had procured at Paddington. We had left Reading far behind us before |
| he thrust the last one of them under the seat, and offered me his |
| cigar-case. |
| |
| "We are going well," said he, looking out the window and glancing at his |
| watch. "Our rate at present is fifty-three and a half miles an hour." |
| |
| "I have not observed the quarter-mile posts," said I. |
| |
| "Nor have I. But the telegraph posts upon this line are sixty yards |
| apart, and the calculation is a simple one. I presume that you |
| have looked into this matter of the murder of John Straker and the |
| disappearance of Silver Blaze?" |
| |
| "I have seen what the Telegraph and the Chronicle have to say." |
| |
| "It is one of those cases where the art of the reasoner should be |
| used rather for the sifting of details than for the acquiring of fresh |
| evidence. The tragedy has been so uncommon, so complete and of such |
| personal importance to so many people, that we are suffering from a |
| plethora of surmise, conjecture, and hypothesis. The difficulty is to |
| detach the framework of fact--of absolute undeniable fact--from the |
| embellishments of theorists and reporters. Then, having established |
| ourselves upon this sound basis, it is our duty to see what inferences |
| may be drawn and what are the special points upon which the whole |
| mystery turns. On Tuesday evening I received telegrams from both Colonel |
| Ross, the owner of the horse, and from Inspector Gregory, who is looking |
| after the case, inviting my cooperation." |
| |
| "Tuesday evening!" I exclaimed. "And this is Thursday morning. Why |
| didn't you go down yesterday?" |
| |
| "Because I made a blunder, my dear Watson--which is, I am afraid, a more |
| common occurrence than any one would think who only knew me through your |
| memoirs. The fact is that I could not believe it possible that the most |
| remarkable horse in England could long remain concealed, especially in |
| so sparsely inhabited a place as the north of Dartmoor. From hour to |
| hour yesterday I expected to hear that he had been found, and that |
| his abductor was the murderer of John Straker. When, however, another |
| morning had come, and I found that beyond the arrest of young Fitzroy |
| Simpson nothing had been done, I felt that it was time for me to take |
| action. Yet in some ways I feel that yesterday has not been wasted." |
| |
| "You have formed a theory, then?" |
| |
| "At least I have got a grip of the essential facts of the case. I shall |
| enumerate them to you, for nothing clears up a case so much as stating |
| it to another person, and I can hardly expect your co-operation if I do |
| not show you the position from which we start." |
| |
| I lay back against the cushions, puffing at my cigar, while Holmes, |
| leaning forward, with his long, thin forefinger checking off the points |
| upon the palm of his left hand, gave me a sketch of the events which had |
| led to our journey. |
| |
| "Silver Blaze," said he, "is from the Somomy stock, and holds as |
| brilliant a record as his famous ancestor. He is now in his fifth year, |
| and has brought in turn each of the prizes of the turf to Colonel Ross, |
| his fortunate owner. Up to the time of the catastrophe he was the first |
| favorite for the Wessex Cup, the betting being three to one on him. He |
| has always, however, been a prime favorite with the racing public, and |
| has never yet disappointed them, so that even at those odds enormous |
| sums of money have been laid upon him. It is obvious, therefore, that |
| there were many people who had the strongest interest in preventing |
| Silver Blaze from being there at the fall of the flag next Tuesday. |
| |
| "The fact was, of course, appreciated at King's Pyland, where the |
| Colonel's training-stable is situated. Every precaution was taken to |
| guard the favorite. The trainer, John Straker, is a retired jockey |
| who rode in Colonel Ross's colors before he became too heavy for the |
| weighing-chair. He has served the Colonel for five years as jockey and |
| for seven as trainer, and has always shown himself to be a zealous and |
| honest servant. Under him were three lads; for the establishment was a |
| small one, containing only four horses in all. One of these lads sat up |
| each night in the stable, while the others slept in the loft. All three |
| bore excellent characters. John Straker, who is a married man, lived |
| in a small villa about two hundred yards from the stables. He has no |
| children, keeps one maid-servant, and is comfortably off. The country |
| round is very lonely, but about half a mile to the north there is a |
| small cluster of villas which have been built by a Tavistock contractor |
| for the use of invalids and others who may wish to enjoy the pure |
| Dartmoor air. Tavistock itself lies two miles to the west, while |
| across the moor, also about two miles distant, is the larger training |
| establishment of Mapleton, which belongs to Lord Backwater, and is |
| managed by Silas Brown. In every other direction the moor is a complete |
| wilderness, inhabited only by a few roaming gypsies. Such was the |
| general situation last Monday night when the catastrophe occurred. |
| |
| "On that evening the horses had been exercised and watered as usual, and |
| the stables were locked up at nine o'clock. Two of the lads walked up |
| to the trainer's house, where they had supper in the kitchen, while the |
| third, Ned Hunter, remained on guard. At a few minutes after nine |
| the maid, Edith Baxter, carried down to the stables his supper, which |
| consisted of a dish of curried mutton. She took no liquid, as there was |
| a water-tap in the stables, and it was the rule that the lad on duty |
| should drink nothing else. The maid carried a lantern with her, as it |
| was very dark and the path ran across the open moor. |
| |
| "Edith Baxter was within thirty yards of the stables, when a man |
| appeared out of the darkness and called to her to stop. As he stepped |
| into the circle of yellow light thrown by the lantern she saw that he |
| was a person of gentlemanly bearing, dressed in a gray suit of tweeds, |
| with a cloth cap. He wore gaiters, and carried a heavy stick with a knob |
| to it. She was most impressed, however, by the extreme pallor of his |
| face and by the nervousness of his manner. His age, she thought, would |
| be rather over thirty than under it. |
| |
| "'Can you tell me where I am?' he asked. 'I had almost made up my mind |
| to sleep on the moor, when I saw the light of your lantern.' |
| |
| "'You are close to the King's Pyland training-stables,' said she. |
| |
| "'Oh, indeed! What a stroke of luck!' he cried. 'I understand that a |
| stable-boy sleeps there alone every night. Perhaps that is his supper |
| which you are carrying to him. Now I am sure that you would not be too |
| proud to earn the price of a new dress, would you?' He took a piece of |
| white paper folded up out of his waistcoat pocket. 'See that the boy |
| has this to-night, and you shall have the prettiest frock that money can |
| buy.' |
| |
| "She was frightened by the earnestness of his manner, and ran past him |
| to the window through which she was accustomed to hand the meals. It was |
| already opened, and Hunter was seated at the small table inside. She had |
| begun to tell him of what had happened, when the stranger came up again. |
| |
| "'Good-evening,' said he, looking through the window. 'I wanted to have |
| a word with you.' The girl has sworn that as he spoke she noticed the |
| corner of the little paper packet protruding from his closed hand. |
| |
| "'What business have you here?' asked the lad. |
| |
| "'It's business that may put something into your pocket,' said the |
| other. 'You've two horses in for the Wessex Cup--Silver Blaze and |
| Bayard. Let me have the straight tip and you won't be a loser. Is it a |
| fact that at the weights Bayard could give the other a hundred yards in |
| five furlongs, and that the stable have put their money on him?' |
| |
| "'So, you're one of those damned touts!' cried the lad. 'I'll show you |
| how we serve them in King's Pyland.' He sprang up and rushed across the |
| stable to unloose the dog. The girl fled away to the house, but as she |
| ran she looked back and saw that the stranger was leaning through the |
| window. A minute later, however, when Hunter rushed out with the hound |
| he was gone, and though he ran all round the buildings he failed to find |
| any trace of him." |
| |
| "One moment," I asked. "Did the stable-boy, when he ran out with the |
| dog, leave the door unlocked behind him?" |
| |
| "Excellent, Watson, excellent!" murmured my companion. "The importance |
| of the point struck me so forcibly that I sent a special wire to |
| Dartmoor yesterday to clear the matter up. The boy locked the door |
| before he left it. The window, I may add, was not large enough for a man |
| to get through. |
| |
| "Hunter waited until his fellow-grooms had returned, when he sent a |
| message to the trainer and told him what had occurred. Straker was |
| excited at hearing the account, although he does not seem to have quite |
| realized its true significance. It left him, however, vaguely uneasy, |
| and Mrs. Straker, waking at one in the morning, found that he was |
| dressing. In reply to her inquiries, he said that he could not sleep on |
| account of his anxiety about the horses, and that he intended to walk |
| down to the stables to see that all was well. She begged him to remain |
| at home, as she could hear the rain pattering against the window, but in |
| spite of her entreaties he pulled on his large mackintosh and left the |
| house. |
| |
| "Mrs. Straker awoke at seven in the morning, to find that her husband |
| had not yet returned. She dressed herself hastily, called the maid, and |
| set off for the stables. The door was open; inside, huddled together |
| upon a chair, Hunter was sunk in a state of absolute stupor, the |
| favorite's stall was empty, and there were no signs of his trainer. |
| |
| "The two lads who slept in the chaff-cutting loft above the harness-room |
| were quickly aroused. They had heard nothing during the night, for they |
| are both sound sleepers. Hunter was obviously under the influence of |
| some powerful drug, and as no sense could be got out of him, he was left |
| to sleep it off while the two lads and the two women ran out in search |
| of the absentees. They still had hopes that the trainer had for some |
| reason taken out the horse for early exercise, but on ascending the |
| knoll near the house, from which all the neighboring moors were visible, |
| they not only could see no signs of the missing favorite, but they |
| perceived something which warned them that they were in the presence of |
| a tragedy. |
| |
| "About a quarter of a mile from the stables John Straker's overcoat was |
| flapping from a furze-bush. Immediately beyond there was a bowl-shaped |
| depression in the moor, and at the bottom of this was found the dead |
| body of the unfortunate trainer. His head had been shattered by a savage |
| blow from some heavy weapon, and he was wounded on the thigh, where |
| there was a long, clean cut, inflicted evidently by some very sharp |
| instrument. It was clear, however, that Straker had defended himself |
| vigorously against his assailants, for in his right hand he held a small |
| knife, which was clotted with blood up to the handle, while in his left |
| he clasped a red and black silk cravat, which was recognized by the maid |
| as having been worn on the preceding evening by the stranger who had |
| visited the stables. Hunter, on recovering from his stupor, was also |
| quite positive as to the ownership of the cravat. He was equally certain |
| that the same stranger had, while standing at the window, drugged his |
| curried mutton, and so deprived the stables of their watchman. As to the |
| missing horse, there were abundant proofs in the mud which lay at the |
| bottom of the fatal hollow that he had been there at the time of the |
| struggle. But from that morning he has disappeared, and although a large |
| reward has been offered, and all the gypsies of Dartmoor are on the |
| alert, no news has come of him. Finally, an analysis has shown that |
| the remains of his supper left by the stable-lad contain an appreciable |
| quantity of powdered opium, while the people at the house partook of the |
| same dish on the same night without any ill effect. |
| |
| "Those are the main facts of the case, stripped of all surmise, and |
| stated as baldly as possible. I shall now recapitulate what the police |
| have done in the matter. |
| |
| "Inspector Gregory, to whom the case has been committed, is an extremely |
| competent officer. Were he but gifted with imagination he might rise to |
| great heights in his profession. On his arrival he promptly found and |
| arrested the man upon whom suspicion naturally rested. There was little |
| difficulty in finding him, for he inhabited one of those villas which I |
| have mentioned. His name, it appears, was Fitzroy Simpson. He was a man |
| of excellent birth and education, who had squandered a fortune upon the |
| turf, and who lived now by doing a little quiet and genteel book-making |
| in the sporting clubs of London. An examination of his betting-book |
| shows that bets to the amount of five thousand pounds had been |
| registered by him against the favorite. On being arrested he volunteered |
| that statement that he had come down to Dartmoor in the hope of |
| getting some information about the King's Pyland horses, and also about |
| Desborough, the second favorite, which was in charge of Silas Brown at |
| the Mapleton stables. He did not attempt to deny that he had acted as |
| described upon the evening before, but declared that he had no sinister |
| designs, and had simply wished to obtain first-hand information. When |
| confronted with his cravat, he turned very pale, and was utterly unable |
| to account for its presence in the hand of the murdered man. His wet |
| clothing showed that he had been out in the storm of the night before, |
| and his stick, which was a Penang-lawyer weighted with lead, was just |
| such a weapon as might, by repeated blows, have inflicted the terrible |
| injuries to which the trainer had succumbed. On the other hand, there |
| was no wound upon his person, while the state of Straker's knife would |
| show that one at least of his assailants must bear his mark upon him. |
| There you have it all in a nutshell, Watson, and if you can give me any |
| light I shall be infinitely obliged to you." |
| |
| I had listened with the greatest interest to the statement which Holmes, |
| with characteristic clearness, had laid before me. Though most of the |
| facts were familiar to me, I had not sufficiently appreciated their |
| relative importance, nor their connection to each other. |
| |
| "Is it not possible," I suggested, "that the incised wound upon Straker |
| may have been caused by his own knife in the convulsive struggles which |
| follow any brain injury?" |
| |
| "It is more than possible; it is probable," said Holmes. "In that case |
| one of the main points in favor of the accused disappears." |
| |
| "And yet," said I, "even now I fail to understand what the theory of the |
| police can be." |
| |
| "I am afraid that whatever theory we state has very grave objections to |
| it," returned my companion. "The police imagine, I take it, that this |
| Fitzroy Simpson, having drugged the lad, and having in some way obtained |
| a duplicate key, opened the stable door and took out the horse, with |
| the intention, apparently, of kidnapping him altogether. His bridle is |
| missing, so that Simpson must have put this on. Then, having left the |
| door open behind him, he was leading the horse away over the moor, when |
| he was either met or overtaken by the trainer. A row naturally ensued. |
| Simpson beat out the trainer's brains with his heavy stick without |
| receiving any injury from the small knife which Straker used in |
| self-defence, and then the thief either led the horse on to some secret |
| hiding-place, or else it may have bolted during the struggle, and be |
| now wandering out on the moors. That is the case as it appears to |
| the police, and improbable as it is, all other explanations are more |
| improbable still. However, I shall very quickly test the matter when I |
| am once upon the spot, and until then I cannot really see how we can get |
| much further than our present position." |
| |
| It was evening before we reached the little town of Tavistock, which |
| lies, like the boss of a shield, in the middle of the huge circle of |
| Dartmoor. Two gentlemen were awaiting us in the station--the one a tall, |
| fair man with lion-like hair and beard and curiously penetrating light |
| blue eyes; the other a small, alert person, very neat and dapper, in a |
| frock-coat and gaiters, with trim little side-whiskers and an eye-glass. |
| The latter was Colonel Ross, the well-known sportsman; the other, |
| Inspector Gregory, a man who was rapidly making his name in the English |
| detective service. |
| |
| "I am delighted that you have come down, Mr. Holmes," said the Colonel. |
| "The Inspector here has done all that could possibly be suggested, but I |
| wish to leave no stone unturned in trying to avenge poor Straker and in |
| recovering my horse." |
| |
| "Have there been any fresh developments?" asked Holmes. |
| |
| "I am sorry to say that we have made very little progress," said the |
| Inspector. "We have an open carriage outside, and as you would no doubt |
| like to see the place before the light fails, we might talk it over as |
| we drive." |
| |
| A minute later we were all seated in a comfortable landau, and were |
| rattling through the quaint old Devonshire city. Inspector Gregory was |
| full of his case, and poured out a stream of remarks, while Holmes threw |
| in an occasional question or interjection. Colonel Ross leaned back with |
| his arms folded and his hat tilted over his eyes, while I listened with |
| interest to the dialogue of the two detectives. Gregory was formulating |
| his theory, which was almost exactly what Holmes had foretold in the |
| train. |
| |
| "The net is drawn pretty close round Fitzroy Simpson," he remarked, "and |
| I believe myself that he is our man. At the same time I recognize that |
| the evidence is purely circumstantial, and that some new development may |
| upset it." |
| |
| "How about Straker's knife?" |
| |
| "We have quite come to the conclusion that he wounded himself in his |
| fall." |
| |
| "My friend Dr. Watson made that suggestion to me as we came down. If so, |
| it would tell against this man Simpson." |
| |
| "Undoubtedly. He has neither a knife nor any sign of a wound. The |
| evidence against him is certainly very strong. He had a great interest |
| in the disappearance of the favorite. He lies under suspicion of having |
| poisoned the stable-boy, he was undoubtedly out in the storm, he was |
| armed with a heavy stick, and his cravat was found in the dead man's |
| hand. I really think we have enough to go before a jury." |
| |
| Holmes shook his head. "A clever counsel would tear it all to rags," |
| said he. "Why should he take the horse out of the stable? If he wished |
| to injure it why could he not do it there? Has a duplicate key been |
| found in his possession? What chemist sold him the powdered opium? Above |
| all, where could he, a stranger to the district, hide a horse, and such |
| a horse as this? What is his own explanation as to the paper which he |
| wished the maid to give to the stable-boy?" |
| |
| "He says that it was a ten-pound note. One was found in his purse. But |
| your other difficulties are not so formidable as they seem. He is not |
| a stranger to the district. He has twice lodged at Tavistock in the |
| summer. The opium was probably brought from London. The key, having |
| served its purpose, would be hurled away. The horse may be at the bottom |
| of one of the pits or old mines upon the moor." |
| |
| "What does he say about the cravat?" |
| |
| "He acknowledges that it is his, and declares that he had lost it. But a |
| new element has been introduced into the case which may account for his |
| leading the horse from the stable." |
| |
| Holmes pricked up his ears. |
| |
| "We have found traces which show that a party of gypsies encamped on |
| Monday night within a mile of the spot where the murder took place. On |
| Tuesday they were gone. Now, presuming that there was some understanding |
| between Simpson and these gypsies, might he not have been leading the |
| horse to them when he was overtaken, and may they not have him now?" |
| |
| "It is certainly possible." |
| |
| "The moor is being scoured for these gypsies. I have also examined every |
| stable and out-house in Tavistock, and for a radius of ten miles." |
| |
| "There is another training-stable quite close, I understand?" |
| |
| "Yes, and that is a factor which we must certainly not neglect. As |
| Desborough, their horse, was second in the betting, they had an interest |
| in the disappearance of the favorite. Silas Brown, the trainer, is known |
| to have had large bets upon the event, and he was no friend to poor |
| Straker. We have, however, examined the stables, and there is nothing to |
| connect him with the affair." |
| |
| "And nothing to connect this man Simpson with the interests of the |
| Mapleton stables?" |
| |
| "Nothing at all." |
| |
| Holmes leaned back in the carriage, and the conversation ceased. A few |
| minutes later our driver pulled up at a neat little red-brick villa with |
| overhanging eaves which stood by the road. Some distance off, across a |
| paddock, lay a long gray-tiled out-building. In every other direction |
| the low curves of the moor, bronze-colored from the fading ferns, |
| stretched away to the sky-line, broken only by the steeples of |
| Tavistock, and by a cluster of houses away to the westward which marked |
| the Mapleton stables. We all sprang out with the exception of Holmes, |
| who continued to lean back with his eyes fixed upon the sky in front of |
| him, entirely absorbed in his own thoughts. It was only when I touched |
| his arm that he roused himself with a violent start and stepped out of |
| the carriage. |
| |
| "Excuse me," said he, turning to Colonel Ross, who had looked at him in |
| some surprise. "I was day-dreaming." There was a gleam in his eyes and a |
| suppressed excitement in his manner which convinced me, used as I was |
| to his ways, that his hand was upon a clue, though I could not imagine |
| where he had found it. |
| |
| "Perhaps you would prefer at once to go on to the scene of the crime, |
| Mr. Holmes?" said Gregory. |
| |
| "I think that I should prefer to stay here a little and go into one or |
| two questions of detail. Straker was brought back here, I presume?" |
| |
| "Yes; he lies upstairs. The inquest is to-morrow." |
| |
| "He has been in your service some years, Colonel Ross?" |
| |
| "I have always found him an excellent servant." |
| |
| "I presume that you made an inventory of what he had in his pockets at |
| the time of his death, Inspector?" |
| |
| "I have the things themselves in the sitting-room, if you would care to |
| see them." |
| |
| "I should be very glad." We all filed into the front room and sat round |
| the central table while the Inspector unlocked a square tin box and laid |
| a small heap of things before us. There was a box of vestas, two inches |
| of tallow candle, an A D P brier-root pipe, a pouch of seal-skin with |
| half an ounce of long-cut Cavendish, a silver watch with a gold chain, |
| five sovereigns in gold, an aluminum pencil-case, a few papers, and an |
| ivory-handled knife with a very delicate, inflexible blade marked Weiss |
| & Co., London. |
| |
| "This is a very singular knife," said Holmes, lifting it up and |
| examining it minutely. "I presume, as I see blood-stains upon it, that |
| it is the one which was found in the dead man's grasp. Watson, this |
| knife is surely in your line?" |
| |
| "It is what we call a cataract knife," said I. |
| |
| "I thought so. A very delicate blade devised for very delicate work. |
| A strange thing for a man to carry with him upon a rough expedition, |
| especially as it would not shut in his pocket." |
| |
| "The tip was guarded by a disk of cork which we found beside his body," |
| said the Inspector. "His wife tells us that the knife had lain upon the |
| dressing-table, and that he had picked it up as he left the room. It was |
| a poor weapon, but perhaps the best that he could lay his hands on at |
| the moment." |
| |
| "Very possible. How about these papers?" |
| |
| "Three of them are receipted hay-dealers' accounts. One of them is a |
| letter of instructions from Colonel Ross. This other is a milliner's |
| account for thirty-seven pounds fifteen made out by Madame Lesurier, |
| of Bond Street, to William Derbyshire. Mrs. Straker tells us that |
| Derbyshire was a friend of her husband's and that occasionally his |
| letters were addressed here." |
| |
| "Madam Derbyshire had somewhat expensive tastes," remarked Holmes, |
| glancing down the account. "Twenty-two guineas is rather heavy for a |
| single costume. However there appears to be nothing more to learn, and |
| we may now go down to the scene of the crime." |
| |
| As we emerged from the sitting-room a woman, who had been waiting in |
| the passage, took a step forward and laid her hand upon the Inspector's |
| sleeve. Her face was haggard and thin and eager, stamped with the print |
| of a recent horror. |
| |
| "Have you got them? Have you found them?" she panted. |
| |
| "No, Mrs. Straker. But Mr. Holmes here has come from London to help us, |
| and we shall do all that is possible." |
| |
| "Surely I met you in Plymouth at a garden-party some little time ago, |
| Mrs. Straker?" said Holmes. |
| |
| "No, sir; you are mistaken." |
| |
| "Dear me! Why, I could have sworn to it. You wore a costume of |
| dove-colored silk with ostrich-feather trimming." |
| |
| "I never had such a dress, sir," answered the lady. |
| |
| "Ah, that quite settles it," said Holmes. And with an apology he |
| followed the Inspector outside. A short walk across the moor took us to |
| the hollow in which the body had been found. At the brink of it was the |
| furze-bush upon which the coat had been hung. |
| |
| "There was no wind that night, I understand," said Holmes. |
| |
| "None; but very heavy rain." |
| |
| "In that case the overcoat was not blown against the furze-bush, but |
| placed there." |
| |
| "Yes, it was laid across the bush." |
| |
| "You fill me with interest, I perceive that the ground has been trampled |
| up a good deal. No doubt many feet have been here since Monday night." |
| |
| "A piece of matting has been laid here at the side, and we have all |
| stood upon that." |
| |
| "Excellent." |
| |
| "In this bag I have one of the boots which Straker wore, one of Fitzroy |
| Simpson's shoes, and a cast horseshoe of Silver Blaze." |
| |
| "My dear Inspector, you surpass yourself!" Holmes took the bag, and, |
| descending into the hollow, he pushed the matting into a more central |
| position. Then stretching himself upon his face and leaning his chin |
| upon his hands, he made a careful study of the trampled mud in front of |
| him. "Hullo!" said he, suddenly. "What's this?" It was a wax vesta half |
| burned, which was so coated with mud that it looked at first like a |
| little chip of wood. |
| |
| "I cannot think how I came to overlook it," said the Inspector, with an |
| expression of annoyance. |
| |
| "It was invisible, buried in the mud. I only saw it because I was |
| looking for it." |
| |
| "What! You expected to find it?" |
| |
| "I thought it not unlikely." |
| |
| He took the boots from the bag, and compared the impressions of each of |
| them with marks upon the ground. Then he clambered up to the rim of the |
| hollow, and crawled about among the ferns and bushes. |
| |
| "I am afraid that there are no more tracks," said the Inspector. "I |
| have examined the ground very carefully for a hundred yards in each |
| direction." |
| |
| "Indeed!" said Holmes, rising. "I should not have the impertinence to |
| do it again after what you say. But I should like to take a little walk |
| over the moor before it grows dark, that I may know my ground to-morrow, |
| and I think that I shall put this horseshoe into my pocket for luck." |
| |
| Colonel Ross, who had shown some signs of impatience at my companion's |
| quiet and systematic method of work, glanced at his watch. "I wish you |
| would come back with me, Inspector," said he. "There are several points |
| on which I should like your advice, and especially as to whether we do |
| not owe it to the public to remove our horse's name from the entries for |
| the Cup." |
| |
| "Certainly not," cried Holmes, with decision. "I should let the name |
| stand." |
| |
| The Colonel bowed. "I am very glad to have had your opinion, sir," said |
| he. "You will find us at poor Straker's house when you have finished |
| your walk, and we can drive together into Tavistock." |
| |
| He turned back with the Inspector, while Holmes and I walked slowly |
| across the moor. The sun was beginning to sink behind the stables of |
| Mapleton, and the long, sloping plain in front of us was tinged with |
| gold, deepening into rich, ruddy browns where the faded ferns and |
| brambles caught the evening light. But the glories of the landscape were |
| all wasted upon my companion, who was sunk in the deepest thought. |
| |
| "It's this way, Watson," said he at last. "We may leave the question |
| of who killed John Straker for the instant, and confine ourselves to |
| finding out what has become of the horse. Now, supposing that he broke |
| away during or after the tragedy, where could he have gone to? The horse |
| is a very gregarious creature. If left to himself his instincts would |
| have been either to return to King's Pyland or go over to Mapleton. Why |
| should he run wild upon the moor? He would surely have been seen by now. |
| And why should gypsies kidnap him? These people always clear out when |
| they hear of trouble, for they do not wish to be pestered by the police. |
| They could not hope to sell such a horse. They would run a great risk |
| and gain nothing by taking him. Surely that is clear." |
| |
| "Where is he, then?" |
| |
| "I have already said that he must have gone to King's Pyland or to |
| Mapleton. He is not at King's Pyland. Therefore he is at Mapleton. Let |
| us take that as a working hypothesis and see what it leads us to. This |
| part of the moor, as the Inspector remarked, is very hard and dry. But |
| it falls away towards Mapleton, and you can see from here that there |
| is a long hollow over yonder, which must have been very wet on Monday |
| night. If our supposition is correct, then the horse must have crossed |
| that, and there is the point where we should look for his tracks." |
| |
| We had been walking briskly during this conversation, and a few more |
| minutes brought us to the hollow in question. At Holmes' request I |
| walked down the bank to the right, and he to the left, but I had not |
| taken fifty paces before I heard him give a shout, and saw him waving |
| his hand to me. The track of a horse was plainly outlined in the soft |
| earth in front of him, and the shoe which he took from his pocket |
| exactly fitted the impression. |
| |
| "See the value of imagination," said Holmes. "It is the one quality |
| which Gregory lacks. We imagined what might have happened, acted upon |
| the supposition, and find ourselves justified. Let us proceed." |
| |
| We crossed the marshy bottom and passed over a quarter of a mile of dry, |
| hard turf. Again the ground sloped, and again we came on the tracks. |
| Then we lost them for half a mile, but only to pick them up once more |
| quite close to Mapleton. It was Holmes who saw them first, and he stood |
| pointing with a look of triumph upon his face. A man's track was visible |
| beside the horse's. |
| |
| "The horse was alone before," I cried. |
| |
| "Quite so. It was alone before. Hullo, what is this?" |
| |
| The double track turned sharp off and took the direction of King's |
| Pyland. Holmes whistled, and we both followed along after it. His eyes |
| were on the trail, but I happened to look a little to one side, and |
| saw to my surprise the same tracks coming back again in the opposite |
| direction. |
| |
| "One for you, Watson," said Holmes, when I pointed it out. "You have |
| saved us a long walk, which would have brought us back on our own |
| traces. Let us follow the return track." |
| |
| We had not to go far. It ended at the paving of asphalt which led up |
| to the gates of the Mapleton stables. As we approached, a groom ran out |
| from them. |
| |
| "We don't want any loiterers about here," said he. |
| |
| "I only wished to ask a question," said Holmes, with his finger and |
| thumb in his waistcoat pocket. "Should I be too early to see your |
| master, Mr. Silas Brown, if I were to call at five o'clock to-morrow |
| morning?" |
| |
| "Bless you, sir, if any one is about he will be, for he is always |
| the first stirring. But here he is, sir, to answer your questions for |
| himself. No, sir, no; it is as much as my place is worth to let him see |
| me touch your money. Afterwards, if you like." |
| |
| As Sherlock Holmes replaced the half-crown which he had drawn from his |
| pocket, a fierce-looking elderly man strode out from the gate with a |
| hunting-crop swinging in his hand. |
| |
| "What's this, Dawson!" he cried. "No gossiping! Go about your business! |
| And you, what the devil do you want here?" |
| |
| "Ten minutes' talk with you, my good sir," said Holmes in the sweetest |
| of voices. |
| |
| "I've no time to talk to every gadabout. We want no stranger here. Be |
| off, or you may find a dog at your heels." |
| |
| Holmes leaned forward and whispered something in the trainer's ear. He |
| started violently and flushed to the temples. |
| |
| "It's a lie!" he shouted, "an infernal lie!" |
| |
| "Very good. Shall we argue about it here in public or talk it over in |
| your parlor?" |
| |
| "Oh, come in if you wish to." |
| |
| Holmes smiled. "I shall not keep you more than a few minutes, Watson," |
| said he. "Now, Mr. Brown, I am quite at your disposal." |
| |
| It was twenty minutes, and the reds had all faded into grays before |
| Holmes and the trainer reappeared. Never have I seen such a change as |
| had been brought about in Silas Brown in that short time. His face was |
| ashy pale, beads of perspiration shone upon his brow, and his hands |
| shook until the hunting-crop wagged like a branch in the wind. His |
| bullying, overbearing manner was all gone too, and he cringed along at |
| my companion's side like a dog with its master. |
| |
| "Your instructions will be done. It shall all be done," said he. |
| |
| "There must be no mistake," said Holmes, looking round at him. The other |
| winced as he read the menace in his eyes. |
| |
| "Oh no, there shall be no mistake. It shall be there. Should I change it |
| first or not?" |
| |
| Holmes thought a little and then burst out laughing. "No, don't," said |
| he; "I shall write to you about it. No tricks, now, or--" |
| |
| "Oh, you can trust me, you can trust me!" |
| |
| "Yes, I think I can. Well, you shall hear from me to-morrow." He turned |
| upon his heel, disregarding the trembling hand which the other held out |
| to him, and we set off for King's Pyland. |
| |
| "A more perfect compound of the bully, coward, and sneak than Master |
| Silas Brown I have seldom met with," remarked Holmes as we trudged along |
| together. |
| |
| "He has the horse, then?" |
| |
| "He tried to bluster out of it, but I described to him so exactly what |
| his actions had been upon that morning that he is convinced that I was |
| watching him. Of course you observed the peculiarly square toes in the |
| impressions, and that his own boots exactly corresponded to them. |
| Again, of course no subordinate would have dared to do such a thing. |
| I described to him how, when according to his custom he was the first |
| down, he perceived a strange horse wandering over the moor. How he went |
| out to it, and his astonishment at recognizing, from the white forehead |
| which has given the favorite its name, that chance had put in his power |
| the only horse which could beat the one upon which he had put his money. |
| Then I described how his first impulse had been to lead him back to |
| King's Pyland, and how the devil had shown him how he could hide the |
| horse until the race was over, and how he had led it back and concealed |
| it at Mapleton. When I told him every detail he gave it up and thought |
| only of saving his own skin." |
| |
| "But his stables had been searched?" |
| |
| "Oh, an old horse-faker like him has many a dodge." |
| |
| "But are you not afraid to leave the horse in his power now, since he |
| has every interest in injuring it?" |
| |
| "My dear fellow, he will guard it as the apple of his eye. He knows that |
| his only hope of mercy is to produce it safe." |
| |
| "Colonel Ross did not impress me as a man who would be likely to show |
| much mercy in any case." |
| |
| "The matter does not rest with Colonel Ross. I follow my own methods, |
| and tell as much or as little as I choose. That is the advantage of |
| being unofficial. I don't know whether you observed it, Watson, but the |
| Colonel's manner has been just a trifle cavalier to me. I am inclined |
| now to have a little amusement at his expense. Say nothing to him about |
| the horse." |
| |
| "Certainly not without your permission." |
| |
| "And of course this is all quite a minor point compared to the question |
| of who killed John Straker." |
| |
| "And you will devote yourself to that?" |
| |
| "On the contrary, we both go back to London by the night train." |
| |
| I was thunderstruck by my friend's words. We had only been a few hours |
| in Devonshire, and that he should give up an investigation which he had |
| begun so brilliantly was quite incomprehensible to me. Not a word more |
| could I draw from him until we were back at the trainer's house. The |
| Colonel and the Inspector were awaiting us in the parlor. |
| |
| "My friend and I return to town by the night-express," said Holmes. "We |
| have had a charming little breath of your beautiful Dartmoor air." |
| |
| The Inspector opened his eyes, and the Colonel's lip curled in a sneer. |
| |
| "So you despair of arresting the murderer of poor Straker," said he. |
| |
| Holmes shrugged his shoulders. "There are certainly grave difficulties |
| in the way," said he. "I have every hope, however, that your horse |
| will start upon Tuesday, and I beg that you will have your jockey in |
| readiness. Might I ask for a photograph of Mr. John Straker?" |
| |
| The Inspector took one from an envelope and handed it to him. |
| |
| "My dear Gregory, you anticipate all my wants. If I might ask you to |
| wait here for an instant, I have a question which I should like to put |
| to the maid." |
| |
| "I must say that I am rather disappointed in our London consultant," |
| said Colonel Ross, bluntly, as my friend left the room. "I do not see |
| that we are any further than when he came." |
| |
| "At least you have his assurance that your horse will run," said I. |
| |
| "Yes, I have his assurance," said the Colonel, with a shrug of his |
| shoulders. "I should prefer to have the horse." |
| |
| I was about to make some reply in defence of my friend when he entered |
| the room again. |
| |
| "Now, gentlemen," said he, "I am quite ready for Tavistock." |
| |
| As we stepped into the carriage one of the stable-lads held the door |
| open for us. A sudden idea seemed to occur to Holmes, for he leaned |
| forward and touched the lad upon the sleeve. |
| |
| "You have a few sheep in the paddock," he said. "Who attends to them?" |
| |
| "I do, sir." |
| |
| "Have you noticed anything amiss with them of late?" |
| |
| "Well, sir, not of much account; but three of them have gone lame, sir." |
| |
| I could see that Holmes was extremely pleased, for he chuckled and |
| rubbed his hands together. |
| |
| "A long shot, Watson; a very long shot," said he, pinching my arm. |
| "Gregory, let me recommend to your attention this singular epidemic |
| among the sheep. Drive on, coachman!" |
| |
| Colonel Ross still wore an expression which showed the poor opinion |
| which he had formed of my companion's ability, but I saw by the |
| Inspector's face that his attention had been keenly aroused. |
| |
| "You consider that to be important?" he asked. |
| |
| "Exceedingly so." |
| |
| "Is there any point to which you would wish to draw my attention?" |
| |
| "To the curious incident of the dog in the night-time." |
| |
| "The dog did nothing in the night-time." |
| |
| "That was the curious incident," remarked Sherlock Holmes. |
| |
| |
| Four days later Holmes and I were again in the train, bound for |
| Winchester to see the race for the Wessex Cup. Colonel Ross met us by |
| appointment outside the station, and we drove in his drag to the course |
| beyond the town. His face was grave, and his manner was cold in the |
| extreme. |
| |
| "I have seen nothing of my horse," said he. |
| |
| "I suppose that you would know him when you saw him?" asked Holmes. |
| |
| The Colonel was very angry. "I have been on the turf for twenty years, |
| and never was asked such a question as that before," said he. "A |
| child would know Silver Blaze, with his white forehead and his mottled |
| off-foreleg." |
| |
| "How is the betting?" |
| |
| "Well, that is the curious part of it. You could have got fifteen to one |
| yesterday, but the price has become shorter and shorter, until you can |
| hardly get three to one now." |
| |
| "Hum!" said Holmes. "Somebody knows something, that is clear." |
| |
| As the drag drew up in the enclosure near the grand stand I glanced at |
| the card to see the entries. |
| |
| Wessex Plate [it ran] 50 sovs each h ft with 1000 sovs added for four |
| and five year olds. Second, L300. Third, L200. New course (one mile and |
| five furlongs). Mr. Heath Newton's The Negro. Red cap. Cinnamon jacket. |
| Colonel Wardlaw's Pugilist. Pink cap. Blue and black jacket. Lord |
| Backwater's Desborough. Yellow cap and sleeves. Colonel Ross's Silver |
| Blaze. Black cap. Red jacket. Duke of Balmoral's Iris. Yellow and black |
| stripes. Lord Singleford's Rasper. Purple cap. Black sleeves. |
| |
| "We scratched our other one, and put all hopes on your word," said the |
| Colonel. "Why, what is that? Silver Blaze favorite?" |
| |
| "Five to four against Silver Blaze!" roared the ring. "Five to four |
| against Silver Blaze! Five to fifteen against Desborough! Five to four |
| on the field!" |
| |
| "There are the numbers up," I cried. "They are all six there." |
| |
| "All six there? Then my horse is running," cried the Colonel in great |
| agitation. "But I don't see him. My colors have not passed." |
| |
| "Only five have passed. This must be he." |
| |
| As I spoke a powerful bay horse swept out from the weighing enclosure |
| and cantered past us, bearing on its back the well-known black and red |
| of the Colonel. |
| |
| "That's not my horse," cried the owner. "That beast has not a white hair |
| upon its body. What is this that you have done, Mr. Holmes?" |
| |
| "Well, well, let us see how he gets on," said my friend, imperturbably. |
| For a few minutes he gazed through my field-glass. "Capital! An |
| excellent start!" he cried suddenly. "There they are, coming round the |
| curve!" |
| |
| From our drag we had a superb view as they came up the straight. The six |
| horses were so close together that a carpet could have covered them, |
| but half way up the yellow of the Mapleton stable showed to the front. |
| Before they reached us, however, Desborough's bolt was shot, and the |
| Colonel's horse, coming away with a rush, passed the post a good six |
| lengths before its rival, the Duke of Balmoral's Iris making a bad |
| third. |
| |
| "It's my race, anyhow," gasped the Colonel, passing his hand over his |
| eyes. "I confess that I can make neither head nor tail of it. Don't you |
| think that you have kept up your mystery long enough, Mr. Holmes?" |
| |
| "Certainly, Colonel, you shall know everything. Let us all go round and |
| have a look at the horse together. Here he is," he continued, as we made |
| our way into the weighing enclosure, where only owners and their friends |
| find admittance. "You have only to wash his face and his leg in spirits |
| of wine, and you will find that he is the same old Silver Blaze as |
| ever." |
| |
| "You take my breath away!" |
| |
| "I found him in the hands of a faker, and took the liberty of running |
| him just as he was sent over." |
| |
| "My dear sir, you have done wonders. The horse looks very fit and well. |
| It never went better in its life. I owe you a thousand apologies |
| for having doubted your ability. You have done me a great service by |
| recovering my horse. You would do me a greater still if you could lay |
| your hands on the murderer of John Straker." |
| |
| "I have done so," said Holmes quietly. |
| |
| The Colonel and I stared at him in amazement. "You have got him! Where |
| is he, then?" |
| |
| "He is here." |
| |
| "Here! Where?" |
| |
| "In my company at the present moment." |
| |
| The Colonel flushed angrily. "I quite recognize that I am under |
| obligations to you, Mr. Holmes," said he, "but I must regard what you |
| have just said as either a very bad joke or an insult." |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes laughed. "I assure you that I have not associated |
| you with the crime, Colonel," said he. "The real murderer is standing |
| immediately behind you." He stepped past and laid his hand upon the |
| glossy neck of the thoroughbred. |
| |
| "The horse!" cried both the Colonel and myself. |
| |
| "Yes, the horse. And it may lessen his guilt if I say that it was |
| done in self-defence, and that John Straker was a man who was entirely |
| unworthy of your confidence. But there goes the bell, and as I stand |
| to win a little on this next race, I shall defer a lengthy explanation |
| until a more fitting time." |
| |
| |
| |
| We had the corner of a Pullman car to ourselves that evening as we |
| whirled back to London, and I fancy that the journey was a short one |
| to Colonel Ross as well as to myself, as we listened to our |
| companion's narrative of the events which had occurred at the Dartmoor |
| training-stables upon the Monday night, and the means by which he had |
| unravelled them. |
| |
| "I confess," said he, "that any theories which I had formed from |
| the newspaper reports were entirely erroneous. And yet there were |
| indications there, had they not been overlaid by other details which |
| concealed their true import. I went to Devonshire with the conviction |
| that Fitzroy Simpson was the true culprit, although, of course, I saw |
| that the evidence against him was by no means complete. It was while I |
| was in the carriage, just as we reached the trainer's house, that the |
| immense significance of the curried mutton occurred to me. You may |
| remember that I was distrait, and remained sitting after you had all |
| alighted. I was marvelling in my own mind how I could possibly have |
| overlooked so obvious a clue." |
| |
| "I confess," said the Colonel, "that even now I cannot see how it helps |
| us." |
| |
| "It was the first link in my chain of reasoning. Powdered opium is by no |
| means tasteless. The flavor is not disagreeable, but it is perceptible. |
| Were it mixed with any ordinary dish the eater would undoubtedly detect |
| it, and would probably eat no more. A curry was exactly the medium |
| which would disguise this taste. By no possible supposition could |
| this stranger, Fitzroy Simpson, have caused curry to be served in |
| the trainer's family that night, and it is surely too monstrous a |
| coincidence to suppose that he happened to come along with powdered |
| opium upon the very night when a dish happened to be served which would |
| disguise the flavor. That is unthinkable. Therefore Simpson becomes |
| eliminated from the case, and our attention centers upon Straker and |
| his wife, the only two people who could have chosen curried mutton for |
| supper that night. The opium was added after the dish was set aside |
| for the stable-boy, for the others had the same for supper with no ill |
| effects. Which of them, then, had access to that dish without the maid |
| seeing them? |
| |
| "Before deciding that question I had grasped the significance of the |
| silence of the dog, for one true inference invariably suggests others. |
| The Simpson incident had shown me that a dog was kept in the stables, |
| and yet, though some one had been in and had fetched out a horse, he |
| had not barked enough to arouse the two lads in the loft. Obviously the |
| midnight visitor was some one whom the dog knew well. |
| |
| "I was already convinced, or almost convinced, that John Straker went |
| down to the stables in the dead of the night and took out Silver Blaze. |
| For what purpose? For a dishonest one, obviously, or why should he drug |
| his own stable-boy? And yet I was at a loss to know why. There have been |
| cases before now where trainers have made sure of great sums of money |
| by laying against their own horses, through agents, and then preventing |
| them from winning by fraud. Sometimes it is a pulling jockey. Sometimes |
| it is some surer and subtler means. What was it here? I hoped that the |
| contents of his pockets might help me to form a conclusion. |
| |
| "And they did so. You cannot have forgotten the singular knife which was |
| found in the dead man's hand, a knife which certainly no sane man would |
| choose for a weapon. It was, as Dr. Watson told us, a form of knife |
| which is used for the most delicate operations known in surgery. And it |
| was to be used for a delicate operation that night. You must know, with |
| your wide experience of turf matters, Colonel Ross, that it is possible |
| to make a slight nick upon the tendons of a horse's ham, and to do it |
| subcutaneously, so as to leave absolutely no trace. A horse so treated |
| would develop a slight lameness, which would be put down to a strain in |
| exercise or a touch of rheumatism, but never to foul play." |
| |
| "Villain! Scoundrel!" cried the Colonel. |
| |
| "We have here the explanation of why John Straker wished to take the |
| horse out on to the moor. So spirited a creature would have certainly |
| roused the soundest of sleepers when it felt the prick of the knife. It |
| was absolutely necessary to do it in the open air." |
| |
| "I have been blind!" cried the Colonel. "Of course that was why he |
| needed the candle, and struck the match." |
| |
| "Undoubtedly. But in examining his belongings I was fortunate enough to |
| discover not only the method of the crime, but even its motives. As a |
| man of the world, Colonel, you know that men do not carry other people's |
| bills about in their pockets. We have most of us quite enough to do to |
| settle our own. I at once concluded that Straker was leading a double |
| life, and keeping a second establishment. The nature of the bill showed |
| that there was a lady in the case, and one who had expensive tastes. |
| Liberal as you are with your servants, one can hardly expect that they |
| can buy twenty-guinea walking dresses for their ladies. I questioned |
| Mrs. Straker as to the dress without her knowing it, and having |
| satisfied myself that it had never reached her, I made a note of the |
| milliner's address, and felt that by calling there with Straker's |
| photograph I could easily dispose of the mythical Derbyshire. |
| |
| "From that time on all was plain. Straker had led out the horse to a |
| hollow where his light would be invisible. Simpson in his flight had |
| dropped his cravat, and Straker had picked it up--with some idea, |
| perhaps, that he might use it in securing the horse's leg. Once in the |
| hollow, he had got behind the horse and had struck a light; but the |
| creature frightened at the sudden glare, and with the strange instinct |
| of animals feeling that some mischief was intended, had lashed out, and |
| the steel shoe had struck Straker full on the forehead. He had already, |
| in spite of the rain, taken off his overcoat in order to do his delicate |
| task, and so, as he fell, his knife gashed his thigh. Do I make it |
| clear?" |
| |
| "Wonderful!" cried the Colonel. "Wonderful! You might have been there!" |
| |
| "My final shot was, I confess a very long one. It struck me that so |
| astute a man as Straker would not undertake this delicate tendon-nicking |
| without a little practice. What could he practice on? My eyes fell upon |
| the sheep, and I asked a question which, rather to my surprise, showed |
| that my surmise was correct. |
| |
| "When I returned to London I called upon the milliner, who had |
| recognized Straker as an excellent customer of the name of Derbyshire, |
| who had a very dashing wife, with a strong partiality for expensive |
| dresses. I have no doubt that this woman had plunged him over head and |
| ears in debt, and so led him into this miserable plot." |
| |
| "You have explained all but one thing," cried the Colonel. "Where was |
| the horse?" |
| |
| "Ah, it bolted, and was cared for by one of your neighbors. We must have |
| an amnesty in that direction, I think. This is Clapham Junction, if I am |
| not mistaken, and we shall be in Victoria in less than ten minutes. If |
| you care to smoke a cigar in our rooms, Colonel, I shall be happy to |
| give you any other details which might interest you." |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure II. The Yellow Face |
| |
| |
| [In publishing these short sketches based upon the numerous cases in |
| which my companion's singular gifts have made us the listeners to, and |
| eventually the actors in, some strange drama, it is only natural that I |
| should dwell rather upon his successes than upon his failures. And this |
| not so much for the sake of his reputation--for, indeed, it was when |
| he was at his wits' end that his energy and his versatility were most |
| admirable--but because where he failed it happened too often that no one |
| else succeeded, and that the tale was left forever without a conclusion. |
| Now and again, however, it chanced that even when he erred, the truth |
| was still discovered. I have noted of some half-dozen cases of the |
| kind; the Adventure of the Musgrave Ritual and that which I am about to |
| recount are the two which present the strongest features of interest.] |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes was a man who seldom took exercise for exercise's sake. |
| Few men were capable of greater muscular effort, and he was undoubtedly |
| one of the finest boxers of his weight that I have ever seen; but he |
| looked upon aimless bodily exertion as a waste of energy, and he seldom |
| bestirred himself save when there was some professional object to be |
| served. Then he was absolutely untiring and indefatigable. That he |
| should have kept himself in training under such circumstances is |
| remarkable, but his diet was usually of the sparest, and his habits |
| were simple to the verge of austerity. Save for the occasional use of |
| cocaine, he had no vices, and he only turned to the drug as a protest |
| against the monotony of existence when cases were scanty and the papers |
| uninteresting. |
| |
| One day in early spring he had so far relaxed as to go for a walk with |
| me in the Park, where the first faint shoots of green were breaking out |
| upon the elms, and the sticky spear-heads of the chestnuts were just |
| beginning to burst into their five-fold leaves. For two hours we rambled |
| about together, in silence for the most part, as befits two men who know |
| each other intimately. It was nearly five before we were back in Baker |
| Street once more. |
| |
| "Beg pardon, sir," said our page-boy, as he opened the door. "There's |
| been a gentleman here asking for you, sir." |
| |
| Holmes glanced reproachfully at me. "So much for afternoon walks!" said |
| he. "Has this gentleman gone, then?" |
| |
| "Yes, sir." |
| |
| "Didn't you ask him in?" |
| |
| "Yes, sir; he came in." |
| |
| "How long did he wait?" |
| |
| "Half an hour, sir. He was a very restless gentleman, sir, a-walkin' |
| and a-stampin' all the time he was here. I was waitin' outside the door, |
| sir, and I could hear him. At last he outs into the passage, and he |
| cries, 'Is that man never goin' to come?' Those were his very words, |
| sir. 'You'll only need to wait a little longer,' says I. 'Then I'll wait |
| in the open air, for I feel half choked,' says he. 'I'll be back before |
| long.' And with that he ups and he outs, and all I could say wouldn't |
| hold him back." |
| |
| "Well, well, you did your best," said Holmes, as we walked into our |
| room. "It's very annoying, though, Watson. I was badly in need of |
| a case, and this looks, from the man's impatience, as if it were of |
| importance. Hullo! That's not your pipe on the table. He must have |
| left his behind him. A nice old brier with a good long stem of what the |
| tobacconists call amber. I wonder how many real amber mouthpieces there |
| are in London? Some people think that a fly in it is a sign. Well, he |
| must have been disturbed in his mind to leave a pipe behind him which he |
| evidently values highly." |
| |
| "How do you know that he values it highly?" I asked. |
| |
| "Well, I should put the original cost of the pipe at seven and sixpence. |
| Now it has, you see, been twice mended, once in the wooden stem and once |
| in the amber. Each of these mends, done, as you observe, with silver |
| bands, must have cost more than the pipe did originally. The man must |
| value the pipe highly when he prefers to patch it up rather than buy a |
| new one with the same money." |
| |
| "Anything else?" I asked, for Holmes was turning the pipe about in his |
| hand, and staring at it in his peculiar pensive way. |
| |
| He held it up and tapped on it with his long, thin fore-finger, as a |
| professor might who was lecturing on a bone. |
| |
| "Pipes are occasionally of extraordinary interest," said he. "Nothing |
| has more individuality, save perhaps watches and bootlaces. The |
| indications here, however, are neither very marked nor very important. |
| The owner is obviously a muscular man, left-handed, with an excellent |
| set of teeth, careless in his habits, and with no need to practise |
| economy." |
| |
| My friend threw out the information in a very offhand way, but I saw |
| that he cocked his eye at me to see if I had followed his reasoning. |
| |
| "You think a man must be well-to-do if he smokes a seven-shilling pipe," |
| said I. |
| |
| "This is Grosvenor mixture at eightpence an ounce," Holmes answered, |
| knocking a little out on his palm. "As he might get an excellent smoke |
| for half the price, he has no need to practise economy." |
| |
| "And the other points?" |
| |
| "He has been in the habit of lighting his pipe at lamps and gas-jets. |
| You can see that it is quite charred all down one side. Of course a |
| match could not have done that. Why should a man hold a match to the |
| side of his pipe? But you cannot light it at a lamp without getting the |
| bowl charred. And it is all on the right side of the pipe. From that I |
| gather that he is a left-handed man. You hold your own pipe to the lamp, |
| and see how naturally you, being right-handed, hold the left side to the |
| flame. You might do it once the other way, but not as a constancy. This |
| has always been held so. Then he has bitten through his amber. It takes |
| a muscular, energetic fellow, and one with a good set of teeth, to do |
| that. But if I am not mistaken I hear him upon the stair, so we shall |
| have something more interesting than his pipe to study." |
| |
| An instant later our door opened, and a tall young man entered the room. |
| He was well but quietly dressed in a dark-gray suit, and carried a brown |
| wide-awake in his hand. I should have put him at about thirty, though he |
| was really some years older. |
| |
| "I beg your pardon," said he, with some embarrassment; "I suppose I |
| should have knocked. Yes, of course I should have knocked. The fact |
| is that I am a little upset, and you must put it all down to that." He |
| passed his hand over his forehead like a man who is half dazed, and then |
| fell rather than sat down upon a chair. |
| |
| "I can see that you have not slept for a night or two," said Holmes, |
| in his easy, genial way. "That tries a man's nerves more than work, and |
| more even than pleasure. May I ask how I can help you?" |
| |
| "I wanted your advice, sir. I don't know what to do and my whole life |
| seems to have gone to pieces." |
| |
| "You wish to employ me as a consulting detective?" |
| |
| "Not that only. I want your opinion as a judicious man--as a man of the |
| world. I want to know what I ought to do next. I hope to God you'll be |
| able to tell me." |
| |
| He spoke in little, sharp, jerky outbursts, and it seemed to me that to |
| speak at all was very painful to him, and that his will all through was |
| overriding his inclinations. |
| |
| "It's a very delicate thing," said he. "One does not like to speak of |
| one's domestic affairs to strangers. It seems dreadful to discuss the |
| conduct of one's wife with two men whom I have never seen before. It's |
| horrible to have to do it. But I've got to the end of my tether, and I |
| must have advice." |
| |
| "My dear Mr. Grant Munro--" began Holmes. |
| |
| Our visitor sprang from his chair. "What!" he cried, "you know my name?" |
| |
| "If you wish to preserve your incognito," said Holmes, smiling, "I would |
| suggest that you cease to write your name upon the lining of your |
| hat, or else that you turn the crown towards the person whom you are |
| addressing. I was about to say that my friend and I have listened to a |
| good many strange secrets in this room, and that we have had the good |
| fortune to bring peace to many troubled souls. I trust that we may do as |
| much for you. Might I beg you, as time may prove to be of importance, to |
| furnish me with the facts of your case without further delay?" |
| |
| Our visitor again passed his hand over his forehead, as if he found it |
| bitterly hard. From every gesture and expression I could see that he was |
| a reserved, self-contained man, with a dash of pride in his nature, more |
| likely to hide his wounds than to expose them. Then suddenly, with a |
| fierce gesture of his closed hand, like one who throws reserve to the |
| winds, he began. |
| |
| "The facts are these, Mr. Holmes," said he. "I am a married man, and |
| have been so for three years. During that time my wife and I have loved |
| each other as fondly and lived as happily as any two that ever were |
| joined. We have not had a difference, not one, in thought or word or |
| deed. And now, since last Monday, there has suddenly sprung up a barrier |
| between us, and I find that there is something in her life and in her |
| thought of which I know as little as if she were the woman who brushes |
| by me in the street. We are estranged, and I want to know why. |
| |
| "Now there is one thing that I want to impress upon you before I go |
| any further, Mr. Holmes. Effie loves me. Don't let there be any mistake |
| about that. She loves me with her whole heart and soul, and never more |
| than now. I know it. I feel it. I don't want to argue about that. A man |
| can tell easily enough when a woman loves him. But there's this secret |
| between us, and we can never be the same until it is cleared." |
| |
| "Kindly let me have the facts, Mr. Munro," said Holmes, with some |
| impatience. |
| |
| "I'll tell you what I know about Effie's history. She was a widow when |
| I met her first, though quite young--only twenty-five. Her name then was |
| Mrs. Hebron. She went out to America when she was young, and lived in |
| the town of Atlanta, where she married this Hebron, who was a lawyer |
| with a good practice. They had one child, but the yellow fever broke out |
| badly in the place, and both husband and child died of it. I have seen |
| his death certificate. This sickened her of America, and she came back |
| to live with a maiden aunt at Pinner, in Middlesex. I may mention that |
| her husband had left her comfortably off, and that she had a capital of |
| about four thousand five hundred pounds, which had been so well invested |
| by him that it returned an average of seven per cent. She had only been |
| six months at Pinner when I met her; we fell in love with each other, |
| and we married a few weeks afterwards. |
| |
| "I am a hop merchant myself, and as I have an income of seven or |
| eight hundred, we found ourselves comfortably off, and took a nice |
| eighty-pound-a-year villa at Norbury. Our little place was very |
| countrified, considering that it is so close to town. We had an inn and |
| two houses a little above us, and a single cottage at the other side of |
| the field which faces us, and except those there were no houses until |
| you got half way to the station. My business took me into town at |
| certain seasons, but in summer I had less to do, and then in our country |
| home my wife and I were just as happy as could be wished. I tell you |
| that there never was a shadow between us until this accursed affair |
| began. |
| |
| "There's one thing I ought to tell you before I go further. When we |
| married, my wife made over all her property to me--rather against my |
| will, for I saw how awkward it would be if my business affairs went |
| wrong. However, she would have it so, and it was done. Well, about six |
| weeks ago she came to me. |
| |
| "'Jack,' said she, 'when you took my money you said that if ever I |
| wanted any I was to ask you for it.' |
| |
| "'Certainly,' said I. 'It's all your own.' |
| |
| "'Well,' said she, 'I want a hundred pounds.' |
| |
| "I was a bit staggered at this, for I had imagined it was simply a new |
| dress or something of the kind that she was after. |
| |
| "'What on earth for?' I asked. |
| |
| "'Oh,' said she, in her playful way, 'you said that you were only my |
| banker, and bankers never ask questions, you know.' |
| |
| "'If you really mean it, of course you shall have the money,' said I. |
| |
| "'Oh, yes, I really mean it.' |
| |
| "'And you won't tell me what you want it for?' |
| |
| "'Some day, perhaps, but not just at present, Jack.' |
| |
| "So I had to be content with that, though it was the first time that |
| there had ever been any secret between us. I gave her a check, and I |
| never thought any more of the matter. It may have nothing to do with |
| what came afterwards, but I thought it only right to mention it. |
| |
| "Well, I told you just now that there is a cottage not far from our |
| house. There is just a field between us, but to reach it you have to |
| go along the road and then turn down a lane. Just beyond it is a nice |
| little grove of Scotch firs, and I used to be very fond of strolling |
| down there, for trees are always a neighborly kind of things. The |
| cottage had been standing empty this eight months, and it was a pity, |
| for it was a pretty two-storied place, with an old-fashioned porch and |
| honeysuckle about it. I have stood many a time and thought what a neat |
| little homestead it would make. |
| |
| "Well, last Monday evening I was taking a stroll down that way, when |
| I met an empty van coming up the lane, and saw a pile of carpets and |
| things lying about on the grass-plot beside the porch. It was clear that |
| the cottage had at last been let. I walked past it, and wondered what |
| sort of folk they were who had come to live so near us. And as I looked |
| I suddenly became aware that a face was watching me out of one of the |
| upper windows. |
| |
| "I don't know what there was about that face, Mr. Holmes, but it seemed |
| to send a chill right down my back. I was some little way off, so that |
| I could not make out the features, but there was something unnatural and |
| inhuman about the face. That was the impression that I had, and I moved |
| quickly forwards to get a nearer view of the person who was watching |
| me. But as I did so the face suddenly disappeared, so suddenly that it |
| seemed to have been plucked away into the darkness of the room. I stood |
| for five minutes thinking the business over, and trying to analyze my |
| impressions. I could not tell if the face were that of a man or a |
| woman. It had been too far from me for that. But its color was what had |
| impressed me most. It was of a livid chalky white, and with something |
| set and rigid about it which was shockingly unnatural. So disturbed |
| was I that I determined to see a little more of the new inmates of |
| the cottage. I approached and knocked at the door, which was instantly |
| opened by a tall, gaunt woman with a harsh, forbidding face. |
| |
| "'What may you be wantin'?' she asked, in a Northern accent. |
| |
| "'I am your neighbor over yonder,' said I, nodding towards my house. 'I |
| see that you have only just moved in, so I thought that if I could be of |
| any help to you in any--' |
| |
| "'Ay, we'll just ask ye when we want ye,' said she, and shut the door |
| in my face. Annoyed at the churlish rebuff, I turned my back and walked |
| home. All evening, though I tried to think of other things, my mind |
| would still turn to the apparition at the window and the rudeness of the |
| woman. I determined to say nothing about the former to my wife, for |
| she is a nervous, highly strung woman, and I had no wish that she would |
| share the unpleasant impression which had been produced upon myself. I |
| remarked to her, however, before I fell asleep, that the cottage was now |
| occupied, to which she returned no reply. |
| |
| "I am usually an extremely sound sleeper. It has been a standing jest |
| in the family that nothing could ever wake me during the night. And yet |
| somehow on that particular night, whether it may have been the slight |
| excitement produced by my little adventure or not I know not, but |
| I slept much more lightly than usual. Half in my dreams I was dimly |
| conscious that something was going on in the room, and gradually became |
| aware that my wife had dressed herself and was slipping on her mantle |
| and her bonnet. My lips were parted to murmur out some sleepy words of |
| surprise or remonstrance at this untimely preparation, when suddenly my |
| half-opened eyes fell upon her face, illuminated by the candle-light, |
| and astonishment held me dumb. She wore an expression such as I had |
| never seen before--such as I should have thought her incapable of |
| assuming. She was deadly pale and breathing fast, glancing furtively |
| towards the bed as she fastened her mantle, to see if she had disturbed |
| me. Then, thinking that I was still asleep, she slipped noiselessly from |
| the room, and an instant later I heard a sharp creaking which could only |
| come from the hinges of the front door. I sat up in bed and rapped my |
| knuckles against the rail to make certain that I was truly awake. Then |
| I took my watch from under the pillow. It was three in the morning. What |
| on this earth could my wife be doing out on the country road at three in |
| the morning? |
| |
| "I had sat for about twenty minutes turning the thing over in my mind |
| and trying to find some possible explanation. The more I thought, the |
| more extraordinary and inexplicable did it appear. I was still puzzling |
| over it when I heard the door gently close again, and her footsteps |
| coming up the stairs. |
| |
| "'Where in the world have you been, Effie?' I asked as she entered. |
| |
| "She gave a violent start and a kind of gasping cry when I spoke, and |
| that cry and start troubled me more than all the rest, for there was |
| something indescribably guilty about them. My wife had always been |
| a woman of a frank, open nature, and it gave me a chill to see her |
| slinking into her own room, and crying out and wincing when her own |
| husband spoke to her. |
| |
| "'You awake, Jack!' she cried, with a nervous laugh. 'Why, I thought |
| that nothing could awake you.' |
| |
| "'Where have you been?' I asked, more sternly. |
| |
| "'I don't wonder that you are surprised,' said she, and I could see that |
| her fingers were trembling as she undid the fastenings of her mantle. |
| 'Why, I never remember having done such a thing in my life before. The |
| fact is that I felt as though I were choking, and had a perfect longing |
| for a breath of fresh air. I really think that I should have fainted if |
| I had not gone out. I stood at the door for a few minutes, and now I am |
| quite myself again.' |
| |
| "All the time that she was telling me this story she never once looked |
| in my direction, and her voice was quite unlike her usual tones. It |
| was evident to me that she was saying what was false. I said nothing |
| in reply, but turned my face to the wall, sick at heart, with my mind |
| filled with a thousand venomous doubts and suspicions. What was it that |
| my wife was concealing from me? Where had she been during that strange |
| expedition? I felt that I should have no peace until I knew, and yet I |
| shrank from asking her again after once she had told me what was false. |
| All the rest of the night I tossed and tumbled, framing theory after |
| theory, each more unlikely than the last. |
| |
| "I should have gone to the City that day, but I was too disturbed in my |
| mind to be able to pay attention to business matters. My wife seemed |
| to be as upset as myself, and I could see from the little questioning |
| glances which she kept shooting at me that she understood that I |
| disbelieved her statement, and that she was at her wits' end what to do. |
| We hardly exchanged a word during breakfast, and immediately afterwards |
| I went out for a walk, that I might think the matter out in the fresh |
| morning air. |
| |
| "I went as far as the Crystal Palace, spent an hour in the grounds, and |
| was back in Norbury by one o'clock. It happened that my way took me past |
| the cottage, and I stopped for an instant to look at the windows, and to |
| see if I could catch a glimpse of the strange face which had looked |
| out at me on the day before. As I stood there, imagine my surprise, Mr. |
| Holmes, when the door suddenly opened and my wife walked out. |
| |
| "I was struck dumb with astonishment at the sight of her; but my |
| emotions were nothing to those which showed themselves upon her face |
| when our eyes met. She seemed for an instant to wish to shrink back |
| inside the house again; and then, seeing how useless all concealment |
| must be, she came forward, with a very white face and frightened eyes |
| which belied the smile upon her lips. |
| |
| "'Ah, Jack,' she said, 'I have just been in to see if I can be of any |
| assistance to our new neighbors. Why do you look at me like that, Jack? |
| You are not angry with me?' |
| |
| "'So,' said I, 'this is where you went during the night.' |
| |
| "'What do you mean?' she cried. |
| |
| "'You came here. I am sure of it. Who are these people, that you should |
| visit them at such an hour?' |
| |
| "'I have not been here before.' |
| |
| "'How can you tell me what you know is false?' I cried. 'Your very voice |
| changes as you speak. When have I ever had a secret from you? I shall |
| enter that cottage, and I shall probe the matter to the bottom.' |
| |
| "'No, no, Jack, for God's sake!' she gasped, in uncontrollable emotion. |
| Then, as I approached the door, she seized my sleeve and pulled me back |
| with convulsive strength. |
| |
| "'I implore you not to do this, Jack,' she cried. 'I swear that I will |
| tell you everything some day, but nothing but misery can come of it if |
| you enter that cottage.' Then, as I tried to shake her off, she clung to |
| me in a frenzy of entreaty. |
| |
| "'Trust me, Jack!' she cried. 'Trust me only this once. You will never |
| have cause to regret it. You know that I would not have a secret from |
| you if it were not for your own sake. Our whole lives are at stake in |
| this. If you come home with me, all will be well. If you force your way |
| into that cottage, all is over between us.' |
| |
| "There was such earnestness, such despair, in her manner that her words |
| arrested me, and I stood irresolute before the door. |
| |
| "'I will trust you on one condition, and on one condition only,' said I |
| at last. 'It is that this mystery comes to an end from now. You are |
| at liberty to preserve your secret, but you must promise me that there |
| shall be no more nightly visits, no more doings which are kept from my |
| knowledge. I am willing to forget those which are passed if you will |
| promise that there shall be no more in the future.' |
| |
| "'I was sure that you would trust me,' she cried, with a great sigh of |
| relief. 'It shall be just as you wish. Come away--oh, come away up to |
| the house.' |
| |
| "Still pulling at my sleeve, she led me away from the cottage. As we |
| went I glanced back, and there was that yellow livid face watching us |
| out of the upper window. What link could there be between that creature |
| and my wife? Or how could the coarse, rough woman whom I had seen the |
| day before be connected with her? It was a strange puzzle, and yet I |
| knew that my mind could never know ease again until I had solved it. |
| |
| "For two days after this I stayed at home, and my wife appeared to abide |
| loyally by our engagement, for, as far as I know, she never stirred out |
| of the house. On the third day, however, I had ample evidence that |
| her solemn promise was not enough to hold her back from this secret |
| influence which drew her away from her husband and her duty. |
| |
| "I had gone into town on that day, but I returned by the 2.40 instead of |
| the 3.36, which is my usual train. As I entered the house the maid ran |
| into the hall with a startled face. |
| |
| "'Where is your mistress?' I asked. |
| |
| "'I think that she has gone out for a walk,' she answered. |
| |
| "My mind was instantly filled with suspicion. I rushed upstairs to make |
| sure that she was not in the house. As I did so I happened to glance out |
| of one of the upper windows, and saw the maid with whom I had just been |
| speaking running across the field in the direction of the cottage. Then |
| of course I saw exactly what it all meant. My wife had gone over there, |
| and had asked the servant to call her if I should return. Tingling with |
| anger, I rushed down and hurried across, determined to end the matter |
| once and forever. I saw my wife and the maid hurrying back along the |
| lane, but I did not stop to speak with them. In the cottage lay the |
| secret which was casting a shadow over my life. I vowed that, come what |
| might, it should be a secret no longer. I did not even knock when I |
| reached it, but turned the handle and rushed into the passage. |
| |
| "It was all still and quiet upon the ground floor. In the kitchen a |
| kettle was singing on the fire, and a large black cat lay coiled up in |
| the basket; but there was no sign of the woman whom I had seen before. |
| I ran into the other room, but it was equally deserted. Then I rushed up |
| the stairs, only to find two other rooms empty and deserted at the top. |
| There was no one at all in the whole house. The furniture and pictures |
| were of the most common and vulgar description, save in the one chamber |
| at the window of which I had seen the strange face. That was comfortable |
| and elegant, and all my suspicions rose into a fierce bitter flame when |
| I saw that on the mantelpiece stood a copy of a full-length photograph |
| of my wife, which had been taken at my request only three months ago. |
| |
| "I stayed long enough to make certain that the house was absolutely |
| empty. Then I left it, feeling a weight at my heart such as I had never |
| had before. My wife came out into the hall as I entered my house; but I |
| was too hurt and angry to speak with her, and pushing past her, I made |
| my way into my study. She followed me, however, before I could close the |
| door. |
| |
| "'I am sorry that I broke my promise, Jack,' said she; 'but if you knew |
| all the circumstances I am sure that you would forgive me.' |
| |
| "'Tell me everything, then,' said I. |
| |
| "'I cannot, Jack, I cannot,' she cried. |
| |
| "'Until you tell me who it is that has been living in that cottage, and |
| who it is to whom you have given that photograph, there can never be any |
| confidence between us,' said I, and breaking away from her, I left the |
| house. That was yesterday, Mr. Holmes, and I have not seen her since, |
| nor do I know anything more about this strange business. It is the first |
| shadow that has come between us, and it has so shaken me that I do not |
| know what I should do for the best. Suddenly this morning it occurred to |
| me that you were the man to advise me, so I have hurried to you now, and |
| I place myself unreservedly in your hands. If there is any point which I |
| have not made clear, pray question me about it. But, above all, tell me |
| quickly what I am to do, for this misery is more than I can bear." |
| |
| Holmes and I had listened with the utmost interest to this extraordinary |
| statement, which had been delivered in the jerky, broken fashion of a |
| man who is under the influence of extreme emotions. My companion sat |
| silent for some time, with his chin upon his hand, lost in thought. |
| |
| "Tell me," said he at last, "could you swear that this was a man's face |
| which you saw at the window?" |
| |
| "Each time that I saw it I was some distance away from it, so that it is |
| impossible for me to say." |
| |
| "You appear, however, to have been disagreeably impressed by it." |
| |
| "It seemed to be of an unnatural color, and to have a strange rigidity |
| about the features. When I approached, it vanished with a jerk." |
| |
| "How long is it since your wife asked you for a hundred pounds?" |
| |
| "Nearly two months." |
| |
| "Have you ever seen a photograph of her first husband?" |
| |
| "No; there was a great fire at Atlanta very shortly after his death, and |
| all her papers were destroyed." |
| |
| "And yet she had a certificate of death. You say that you saw it." |
| |
| "Yes; she got a duplicate after the fire." |
| |
| "Did you ever meet any one who knew her in America?" |
| |
| "No." |
| |
| "Did she ever talk of revisiting the place?" |
| |
| "No." |
| |
| "Or get letters from it?" |
| |
| "No." |
| |
| "Thank you. I should like to think over the matter a little now. If the |
| cottage is now permanently deserted we may have some difficulty. If, on |
| the other hand, as I fancy is more likely, the inmates were warned of |
| your coming, and left before you entered yesterday, then they may be |
| back now, and we should clear it all up easily. Let me advise you, then, |
| to return to Norbury, and to examine the windows of the cottage again. |
| If you have reason to believe that it is inhabited, do not force your |
| way in, but send a wire to my friend and me. We shall be with you within |
| an hour of receiving it, and we shall then very soon get to the bottom |
| of the business." |
| |
| "And if it is still empty?" |
| |
| "In that case I shall come out to-morrow and talk it over with you. |
| Good-by; and, above all, do not fret until you know that you really have |
| a cause for it." |
| |
| "I am afraid that this is a bad business, Watson," said my companion, as |
| he returned after accompanying Mr. Grant Munro to the door. "What do you |
| make of it?" |
| |
| "It had an ugly sound," I answered. |
| |
| "Yes. There's blackmail in it, or I am much mistaken." |
| |
| "And who is the blackmailer?" |
| |
| "Well, it must be the creature who lives in the only comfortable room |
| in the place, and has her photograph above his fireplace. Upon my word, |
| Watson, there is something very attractive about that livid face at the |
| window, and I would not have missed the case for worlds." |
| |
| "You have a theory?" |
| |
| "Yes, a provisional one. But I shall be surprised if it does not turn |
| out to be correct. This woman's first husband is in that cottage." |
| |
| "Why do you think so?" |
| |
| "How else can we explain her frenzied anxiety that her second one should |
| not enter it? The facts, as I read them, are something like this: |
| This woman was married in America. Her husband developed some hateful |
| qualities; or shall we say that he contracted some loathsome disease, |
| and became a leper or an imbecile? She flies from him at last, returns |
| to England, changes her name, and starts her life, as she thinks, |
| afresh. She has been married three years, and believes that her position |
| is quite secure, having shown her husband the death certificate of |
| some man whose name she has assumed, when suddenly her whereabouts |
| is discovered by her first husband; or, we may suppose, by some |
| unscrupulous woman who has attached herself to the invalid. They write |
| to the wife, and threaten to come and expose her. She asks for a hundred |
| pounds, and endeavors to buy them off. They come in spite of it, and |
| when the husband mentions casually to the wife that there are new-comers |
| in the cottage, she knows in some way that they are her pursuers. She |
| waits until her husband is asleep, and then she rushes down to endeavor |
| to persuade them to leave her in peace. Having no success, she goes |
| again next morning, and her husband meets her, as he has told us, as |
| she comes out. She promises him then not to go there again, but two days |
| afterwards the hope of getting rid of those dreadful neighbors was too |
| strong for her, and she made another attempt, taking down with her the |
| photograph which had probably been demanded from her. In the midst of |
| this interview the maid rushed in to say that the master had come home, |
| on which the wife, knowing that he would come straight down to the |
| cottage, hurried the inmates out at the back door, into the grove of |
| fir-trees, probably, which was mentioned as standing near. In this way |
| he found the place deserted. I shall be very much surprised, however, if |
| it is still so when he reconnoitres it this evening. What do you think |
| of my theory?" |
| |
| "It is all surmise." |
| |
| "But at least it covers all the facts. When new facts come to our |
| knowledge which cannot be covered by it, it will be time enough to |
| reconsider it. We can do nothing more until we have a message from our |
| friend at Norbury." |
| |
| But we had not a very long time to wait for that. It came just as we had |
| finished our tea. "The cottage is still tenanted," it said. "Have seen |
| the face again at the window. Will meet the seven o'clock train, and |
| will take no steps until you arrive." |
| |
| |
| He was waiting on the platform when we stepped out, and we could see in |
| the light of the station lamps that he was very pale, and quivering with |
| agitation. |
| |
| "They are still there, Mr. Holmes," said he, laying his hand hard upon |
| my friend's sleeve. "I saw lights in the cottage as I came down. We |
| shall settle it now once and for all." |
| |
| "What is your plan, then?" asked Holmes, as he walked down the dark |
| tree-lined road. |
| |
| "I am going to force my way in and see for myself who is in the house. I |
| wish you both to be there as witnesses." |
| |
| "You are quite determined to do this, in spite of your wife's warning |
| that it is better that you should not solve the mystery?" |
| |
| "Yes, I am determined." |
| |
| "Well, I think that you are in the right. Any truth is better than |
| indefinite doubt. We had better go up at once. Of course, legally, we |
| are putting ourselves hopelessly in the wrong; but I think that it is |
| worth it." |
| |
| It was a very dark night, and a thin rain began to fall as we turned |
| from the high road into a narrow lane, deeply rutted, with hedges on |
| either side. Mr. Grant Munro pushed impatiently forward, however, and we |
| stumbled after him as best we could. |
| |
| "There are the lights of my house," he murmured, pointing to a glimmer |
| among the trees. "And here is the cottage which I am going to enter." |
| |
| We turned a corner in the lane as he spoke, and there was the building |
| close beside us. A yellow bar falling across the black foreground showed |
| that the door was not quite closed, and one window in the upper story |
| was brightly illuminated. As we looked, we saw a dark blur moving across |
| the blind. |
| |
| "There is that creature!" cried Grant Munro. "You can see for yourselves |
| that some one is there. Now follow me, and we shall soon know all." |
| |
| We approached the door; but suddenly a woman appeared out of the shadow |
| and stood in the golden track of the lamp-light. I could not see her |
| face in the darkness, but her arms were thrown out in an attitude of |
| entreaty. |
| |
| "For God's sake, don't Jack!" she cried. "I had a presentiment that you |
| would come this evening. Think better of it, dear! Trust me again, and |
| you will never have cause to regret it." |
| |
| "I have trusted you too long, Effie," he cried, sternly. "Leave go of |
| me! I must pass you. My friends and I are going to settle this matter |
| once and forever!" He pushed her to one side, and we followed closely |
| after him. As he threw the door open an old woman ran out in front of |
| him and tried to bar his passage, but he thrust her back, and an instant |
| afterwards we were all upon the stairs. Grant Munro rushed into the |
| lighted room at the top, and we entered at his heels. |
| |
| It was a cosey, well-furnished apartment, with two candles burning upon |
| the table and two upon the mantelpiece. In the corner, stooping over a |
| desk, there sat what appeared to be a little girl. Her face was turned |
| away as we entered, but we could see that she was dressed in a red |
| frock, and that she had long white gloves on. As she whisked round |
| to us, I gave a cry of surprise and horror. The face which she turned |
| towards us was of the strangest livid tint, and the features were |
| absolutely devoid of any expression. An instant later the mystery was |
| explained. Holmes, with a laugh, passed his hand behind the child's |
| ear, a mask peeled off from her countenance, and there was a little coal |
| black negress, with all her white teeth flashing in amusement at our |
| amazed faces. I burst out laughing, out of sympathy with her merriment; |
| but Grant Munro stood staring, with his hand clutching his throat. |
| |
| "My God!" he cried. "What can be the meaning of this?" |
| |
| "I will tell you the meaning of it," cried the lady, sweeping into |
| the room with a proud, set face. "You have forced me, against my own |
| judgment, to tell you, and now we must both make the best of it. My |
| husband died at Atlanta. My child survived." |
| |
| "Your child?" |
| |
| She drew a large silver locket from her bosom. "You have never seen this |
| open." |
| |
| "I understood that it did not open." |
| |
| She touched a spring, and the front hinged back. There was a portrait |
| within of a man strikingly handsome and intelligent-looking, but bearing |
| unmistakable signs upon his features of his African descent. |
| |
| "That is John Hebron, of Atlanta," said the lady, "and a nobler man |
| never walked the earth. I cut myself off from my race in order to wed |
| him, but never once while he lived did I for an instant regret it. It |
| was our misfortune that our only child took after his people rather than |
| mine. It is often so in such matches, and little Lucy is darker far than |
| ever her father was. But dark or fair, she is my own dear little girlie, |
| and her mother's pet." The little creature ran across at the words and |
| nestled up against the lady's dress. "When I left her in America," she |
| continued, "it was only because her health was weak, and the change |
| might have done her harm. She was given to the care of a faithful Scotch |
| woman who had once been our servant. Never for an instant did I dream |
| of disowning her as my child. But when chance threw you in my way, Jack, |
| and I learned to love you, I feared to tell you about my child. God |
| forgive me, I feared that I should lose you, and I had not the courage |
| to tell you. I had to choose between you, and in my weakness I turned |
| away from my own little girl. For three years I have kept her existence |
| a secret from you, but I heard from the nurse, and I knew that all was |
| well with her. At last, however, there came an overwhelming desire to |
| see the child once more. I struggled against it, but in vain. Though I |
| knew the danger, I determined to have the child over, if it were but |
| for a few weeks. I sent a hundred pounds to the nurse, and I gave her |
| instructions about this cottage, so that she might come as a neighbor, |
| without my appearing to be in any way connected with her. I pushed my |
| precautions so far as to order her to keep the child in the house during |
| the daytime, and to cover up her little face and hands so that even |
| those who might see her at the window should not gossip about there |
| being a black child in the neighborhood. If I had been less cautious |
| I might have been more wise, but I was half crazy with fear that you |
| should learn the truth. |
| |
| "It was you who told me first that the cottage was occupied. I should |
| have waited for the morning, but I could not sleep for excitement, and |
| so at last I slipped out, knowing how difficult it is to awake you. But |
| you saw me go, and that was the beginning of my troubles. Next day you |
| had my secret at your mercy, but you nobly refrained from pursuing your |
| advantage. Three days later, however, the nurse and child only just |
| escaped from the back door as you rushed in at the front one. And now |
| to-night you at last know all, and I ask you what is to become of us, my |
| child and me?" She clasped her hands and waited for an answer. |
| |
| It was a long ten minutes before Grant Munro broke the silence, and |
| when his answer came it was one of which I love to think. He lifted |
| the little child, kissed her, and then, still carrying her, he held his |
| other hand out to his wife and turned towards the door. |
| |
| "We can talk it over more comfortably at home," said he. "I am not a |
| very good man, Effie, but I think that I am a better one than you have |
| given me credit for being." |
| |
| Holmes and I followed them down the lane, and my friend plucked at my |
| sleeve as we came out. |
| |
| "I think," said he, "that we shall be of more use in London than in |
| Norbury." |
| |
| Not another word did he say of the case until late that night, when he |
| was turning away, with his lighted candle, for his bedroom. |
| |
| "Watson," said he, "if it should ever strike you that I am getting a |
| little over-confident in my powers, or giving less pains to a case |
| than it deserves, kindly whisper 'Norbury' in my ear, and I shall be |
| infinitely obliged to you." |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure III. The Stock-Broker's Clerk |
| |
| |
| Shortly after my marriage I had bought a connection in the Paddington |
| district. Old Mr. Farquhar, from whom I purchased it, had at one time an |
| excellent general practice; but his age, and an affliction of the nature |
| of St. Vitus's dance from which he suffered, had very much thinned it. |
| The public not unnaturally goes on the principle that he who would heal |
| others must himself be whole, and looks askance at the curative powers |
| of the man whose own case is beyond the reach of his drugs. Thus as my |
| predecessor weakened his practice declined, until when I purchased |
| it from him it had sunk from twelve hundred to little more than three |
| hundred a year. I had confidence, however, in my own youth and energy, |
| and was convinced that in a very few years the concern would be as |
| flourishing as ever. |
| |
| For three months after taking over the practice I was kept very closely |
| at work, and saw little of my friend Sherlock Holmes, for I was too busy |
| to visit Baker Street, and he seldom went anywhere himself save upon |
| professional business. I was surprised, therefore, when, one morning in |
| June, as I sat reading the British Medical Journal after breakfast, I |
| heard a ring at the bell, followed by the high, somewhat strident tones |
| of my old companion's voice. |
| |
| "Ah, my dear Watson," said he, striding into the room, "I am very |
| delighted to see you! I trust that Mrs. Watson has entirely recovered |
| from all the little excitements connected with our adventure of the Sign |
| of Four." |
| |
| "Thank you, we are both very well," said I, shaking him warmly by the |
| hand. |
| |
| "And I hope, also," he continued, sitting down in the rocking-chair, |
| "that the cares of medical practice have not entirely obliterated the |
| interest which you used to take in our little deductive problems." |
| |
| "On the contrary," I answered, "it was only last night that I was |
| looking over my old notes, and classifying some of our past results." |
| |
| "I trust that you don't consider your collection closed." |
| |
| "Not at all. I should wish nothing better than to have some more of such |
| experiences." |
| |
| "To-day, for example?" |
| |
| "Yes, to-day, if you like." |
| |
| "And as far off as Birmingham?" |
| |
| "Certainly, if you wish it." |
| |
| "And the practice?" |
| |
| "I do my neighbor's when he goes. He is always ready to work off the |
| debt." |
| |
| "Ha! Nothing could be better," said Holmes, leaning back in his chair |
| and looking keenly at me from under his half closed lids. "I perceive |
| that you have been unwell lately. Summer colds are always a little |
| trying." |
| |
| "I was confined to the house by a severe chill for three days last week. |
| I thought, however, that I had cast off every trace of it." |
| |
| "So you have. You look remarkably robust." |
| |
| "How, then, did you know of it?" |
| |
| "My dear fellow, you know my methods." |
| |
| "You deduced it, then?" |
| |
| "Certainly." |
| |
| "And from what?" |
| |
| "From your slippers." |
| |
| I glanced down at the new patent leathers which I was wearing. "How on |
| earth--" I began, but Holmes answered my question before it was asked. |
| |
| "Your slippers are new," he said. "You could not have had them more than |
| a few weeks. The soles which you are at this moment presenting to me are |
| slightly scorched. For a moment I thought they might have got wet and |
| been burned in the drying. But near the instep there is a small circular |
| wafer of paper with the shopman's hieroglyphics upon it. Damp would of |
| course have removed this. You had, then, been sitting with your feet |
| outstretched to the fire, which a man would hardly do even in so wet a |
| June as this if he were in his full health." |
| |
| Like all Holmes's reasoning the thing seemed simplicity itself when it |
| was once explained. He read the thought upon my features, and his smile |
| had a tinge of bitterness. |
| |
| "I am afraid that I rather give myself away when I explain," said he. |
| "Results without causes are much more impressive. You are ready to come |
| to Birmingham, then?" |
| |
| "Certainly. What is the case?" |
| |
| "You shall hear it all in the train. My client is outside in a |
| four-wheeler. Can you come at once?" |
| |
| "In an instant." I scribbled a note to my neighbor, rushed upstairs to |
| explain the matter to my wife, and joined Holmes upon the door-step. |
| |
| "Your neighbor is a doctor," said he, nodding at the brass plate. |
| |
| "Yes; he bought a practice as I did." |
| |
| "An old-established one?" |
| |
| "Just the same as mine. Both have been ever since the houses were |
| built." |
| |
| "Ah! Then you got hold of the best of the two." |
| |
| "I think I did. But how do you know?" |
| |
| "By the steps, my boy. Yours are worn three inches deeper than his. But |
| this gentleman in the cab is my client, Mr. Hall Pycroft. Allow me to |
| introduce you to him. Whip your horse up, cabby, for we have only just |
| time to catch our train." |
| |
| The man whom I found myself facing was a well built, fresh-complexioned |
| young fellow, with a frank, honest face and a slight, crisp, yellow |
| mustache. He wore a very shiny top hat and a neat suit of sober black, |
| which made him look what he was--a smart young City man, of the class |
| who have been labeled cockneys, but who give us our crack volunteer |
| regiments, and who turn out more fine athletes and sportsmen than any |
| body of men in these islands. His round, ruddy face was naturally full |
| of cheeriness, but the corners of his mouth seemed to me to be pulled |
| down in a half-comical distress. It was not, however, until we were |
| all in a first-class carriage and well started upon our journey to |
| Birmingham that I was able to learn what the trouble was which had |
| driven him to Sherlock Holmes. |
| |
| "We have a clear run here of seventy minutes," Holmes remarked. "I |
| want you, Mr. Hall Pycroft, to tell my friend your very interesting |
| experience exactly as you have told it to me, or with more detail if |
| possible. It will be of use to me to hear the succession of events |
| again. It is a case, Watson, which may prove to have something in it, or |
| may prove to have nothing, but which, at least, presents those unusual |
| and outré features which are as dear to you as they are to me. Now, Mr. |
| Pycroft, I shall not interrupt you again." |
| |
| Our young companion looked at me with a twinkle in his eye. |
| |
| "The worst of the story is," said he, "that I show myself up as such a |
| confounded fool. Of course it may work out all right, and I don't see |
| that I could have done otherwise; but if I have lost my crib and get |
| nothing in exchange I shall feel what a soft Johnnie I have been. I'm |
| not very good at telling a story, Dr. Watson, but it is like this with |
| me: |
| |
| "I used to have a billet at Coxon & Woodhouse's, of Draper's Gardens, |
| but they were let in early in the spring through the Venezuelan loan, |
| as no doubt you remember, and came a nasty cropper. I had been with them |
| five years, and old Coxon gave me a ripping good testimonial when |
| the smash came, but of course we clerks were all turned adrift, the |
| twenty-seven of us. I tried here and tried there, but there were lots of |
| other chaps on the same lay as myself, and it was a perfect frost for a |
| long time. I had been taking three pounds a week at Coxon's, and I had |
| saved about seventy of them, but I soon worked my way through that and |
| out at the other end. I was fairly at the end of my tether at last, |
| and could hardly find the stamps to answer the advertisements or the |
| envelopes to stick them to. I had worn out my boots paddling up office |
| stairs, and I seemed just as far from getting a billet as ever. |
| |
| "At last I saw a vacancy at Mawson & Williams's, the great stock-broking |
| firm in Lombard Street. I dare say E. C. Is not much in your line, but |
| I can tell you that this is about the richest house in London. |
| The advertisement was to be answered by letter only. I sent in my |
| testimonial and application, but without the least hope of getting it. |
| Back came an answer by return, saying that if I would appear next Monday |
| I might take over my new duties at once, provided that my appearance was |
| satisfactory. No one knows how these things are worked. Some people say |
| that the manager just plunges his hand into the heap and takes the first |
| that comes. Anyhow it was my innings that time, and I don't ever wish to |
| feel better pleased. The screw was a pound a week rise, and the duties |
| just about the same as at Coxon's. |
| |
| "And now I come to the queer part of the business. I was in diggings out |
| Hampstead way, 17 Potter's Terrace. Well, I was sitting doing a smoke |
| that very evening after I had been promised the appointment, when up |
| came my landlady with a card which had 'Arthur Pinner, Financial Agent,' |
| printed upon it. I had never heard the name before and could not imagine |
| what he wanted with me; but, of course, I asked her to show him up. In |
| he walked, a middle-sized, dark-haired, dark-eyed, black-bearded man, |
| with a touch of the Sheeny about his nose. He had a brisk kind of way |
| with him and spoke sharply, like a man who knew the value of time." |
| |
| "'Mr. Hall Pycroft, I believe?'" said he. |
| |
| "'Yes, sir,' I answered, pushing a chair towards him. |
| |
| "'Lately engaged at Coxon & Woodhouse's?' |
| |
| "'Yes, sir.' |
| |
| "'And now on the staff of Mawson's.' |
| |
| "'Quite so.' |
| |
| "'Well,' said he, 'the fact is that I have heard some really |
| extraordinary stories about your financial ability. You remember Parker, |
| who used to be Coxon's manager? He can never say enough about it.' |
| |
| "Of course I was pleased to hear this. I had always been pretty sharp in |
| the office, but I had never dreamed that I was talked about in the City |
| in this fashion. |
| |
| "'You have a good memory?' said he. |
| |
| "'Pretty fair,' I answered, modestly. |
| |
| "'Have you kept in touch with the market while you have been out of |
| work?' he asked. |
| |
| "'Yes. I read the stock exchange list every morning.' |
| |
| "'Now that shows real application!' he cried. 'That is the way to |
| prosper! You won't mind my testing you, will you? Let me see. How are |
| Ayrshires?' |
| |
| "'A hundred and six and a quarter to a hundred and five and |
| seven-eighths.' |
| |
| "'And New Zealand consolidated?' |
| |
| "'A hundred and four. |
| |
| "'And British Broken Hills?' |
| |
| "'Seven to seven-and-six.' |
| |
| "'Wonderful!' he cried, with his hands up. 'This quite fits in with all |
| that I had heard. My boy, my boy, you are very much too good to be a |
| clerk at Mawson's!' |
| |
| "This outburst rather astonished me, as you can think. 'Well,' said I, |
| 'other people don't think quite so much of me as you seem to do, Mr. |
| Pinner. I had a hard enough fight to get this berth, and I am very glad |
| to have it.' |
| |
| "'Pooh, man; you should soar above it. You are not in your true sphere. |
| Now, I'll tell you how it stands with me. What I have to offer is little |
| enough when measured by your ability, but when compared with Mawson's, |
| it's light to dark. Let me see. When do you go to Mawson's?' |
| |
| "'On Monday.' |
| |
| "'Ha, ha! I think I would risk a little sporting flutter that you don't |
| go there at all.' |
| |
| "'Not go to Mawson's?' |
| |
| "'No, sir. By that day you will be the business manager of the |
| Franco-Midland Hardware Company, Limited, with a hundred and thirty-four |
| branches in the towns and villages of France, not counting one in |
| Brussels and one in San Remo.' |
| |
| "This took my breath away. 'I never heard of it,' said I. |
| |
| "'Very likely not. It has been kept very quiet, for the capital was all |
| privately subscribed, and it's too good a thing to let the public |
| into. My brother, Harry Pinner, is promoter, and joins the board after |
| allotment as managing director. He knew I was in the swim down here, and |
| asked me to pick up a good man cheap. A young, pushing man with plenty |
| of snap about him. Parker spoke of you, and that brought me here |
| to-night. We can only offer you a beggarly five hundred to start with.' |
| |
| "'Five hundred a year!' I shouted. |
| |
| "'Only that at the beginning; but you are to have an overriding |
| commission of one per cent on all business done by your agents, and you |
| may take my word for it that this will come to more than your salary.' |
| |
| "'But I know nothing about hardware.' |
| |
| "'Tut, my boy; you know about figures.' |
| |
| "My head buzzed, and I could hardly sit still in my chair. But suddenly |
| a little chill of doubt came upon me. |
| |
| "'I must be frank with you,' said I. 'Mawson only gives me two hundred, |
| but Mawson is safe. Now, really, I know so little about your company |
| that--' |
| |
| "'Ah, smart, smart!' he cried, in a kind of ecstasy of delight. 'You |
| are the very man for us. You are not to be talked over, and quite right, |
| too. Now, here's a note for a hundred pounds, and if you think that we |
| can do business you may just slip it into your pocket as an advance upon |
| your salary.' |
| |
| "'That is very handsome,' said I. 'When should I take over my new |
| duties?' |
| |
| "'Be in Birmingham to-morrow at one,' said he. 'I have a note in my |
| pocket here which you will take to my brother. You will find him at |
| 126b Corporation Street, where the temporary offices of the company |
| are situated. Of course he must confirm your engagement, but between |
| ourselves it will be all right.' |
| |
| "'Really, I hardly know how to express my gratitude, Mr. Pinner,' said |
| I. |
| |
| "'Not at all, my boy. You have only got your deserts. There are one or |
| two small things--mere formalities--which I must arrange with you. |
| You have a bit of paper beside you there. Kindly write upon it "I am |
| perfectly willing to act as business manager to the Franco-Midland |
| Hardware Company, Limited, at a minimum salary of L500."' |
| |
| "I did as he asked, and he put the paper in his pocket. |
| |
| "'There is one other detail,' said he. 'What do you intend to do about |
| Mawson's?' |
| |
| "I had forgotten all about Mawson's in my joy. 'I'll write and resign,' |
| said I. |
| |
| "'Precisely what I don't want you to do. I had a row over you with |
| Mawson's manager. I had gone up to ask him about you, and he was very |
| offensive; accused me of coaxing you away from the service of the firm, |
| and that sort of thing. At last I fairly lost my temper. "If you want |
| good men you should pay them a good price," said I.' |
| |
| "'He would rather have our small price than your big one,' said he. |
| |
| "'I'll lay you a fiver,' said I, 'that when he has my offer you'll never |
| so much as hear from him again.' |
| |
| "'Done!' said he. 'We picked him out of the gutter, and he won't leave |
| us so easily.' Those were his very words." |
| |
| "'The impudent scoundrel!' I cried. 'I've never so much as seen him in |
| my life. Why should I consider him in any way? I shall certainly not |
| write if you would rather I didn't.' |
| |
| "'Good! That's a promise,' said he, rising from his chair. 'Well, I'm |
| delighted to have got so good a man for my brother. Here's your advance |
| of a hundred pounds, and here is the letter. Make a note of the address, |
| 126b Corporation Street, and remember that one o'clock to-morrow is |
| your appointment. Good-night; and may you have all the fortune that you |
| deserve!' |
| |
| "That's just about all that passed between us, as near as I can |
| remember. You can imagine, Dr. Watson, how pleased I was at such an |
| extraordinary bit of good fortune. I sat up half the night hugging |
| myself over it, and next day I was off to Birmingham in a train that |
| would take me in plenty time for my appointment. I took my things to |
| a hotel in New Street, and then I made my way to the address which had |
| been given me. |
| |
| "It was a quarter of an hour before my time, but I thought that would |
| make no difference. 126b was a passage between two large shops, which |
| led to a winding stone stair, from which there were many flats, let as |
| offices to companies or professional men. The names of the occupants |
| were painted at the bottom on the wall, but there was no such name as |
| the Franco-Midland Hardware Company, Limited. I stood for a few minutes |
| with my heart in my boots, wondering whether the whole thing was an |
| elaborate hoax or not, when up came a man and addressed me. He was very |
| like the chap I had seen the night before, the same figure and voice, |
| but he was clean shaven and his hair was lighter. |
| |
| "'Are you Mr. Hall Pycroft?' he asked. |
| |
| "'Yes,' said I. |
| |
| "'Oh! I was expecting you, but you are a trifle before your time. I had |
| a note from my brother this morning in which he sang your praises very |
| loudly.' |
| |
| "'I was just looking for the offices when you came. |
| |
| "'We have not got our name up yet, for we only secured these temporary |
| premises last week. Come up with me, and we will talk the matter over.' |
| |
| "I followed him to the top of a very lofty stair, and there, right under |
| the slates, were a couple of empty, dusty little rooms, uncarpeted and |
| uncurtained, into which he led me. I had thought of a great office with |
| shining tables and rows of clerks, such as I was used to, and I dare say |
| I stared rather straight at the two deal chairs and one little table, |
| which, with a ledger and a waste paper basket, made up the whole |
| furniture. |
| |
| "'Don't be disheartened, Mr. Pycroft,' said my new acquaintance, seeing |
| the length of my face. 'Rome was not built in a day, and we have lots of |
| money at our backs, though we don't cut much dash yet in offices. Pray |
| sit down, and let me have your letter.' |
| |
| "I gave it to him, and he read it over very carefully. |
| |
| "'You seem to have made a vast impression upon my brother Arthur,' said |
| he; 'and I know that he is a pretty shrewd judge. He swears by London, |
| you know; and I by Birmingham; but this time I shall follow his advice. |
| Pray consider yourself definitely engaged." |
| |
| "'What are my duties?' I asked. |
| |
| "'You will eventually manage the great depot in Paris, which will pour |
| a flood of English crockery into the shops of a hundred and thirty-four |
| agents in France. The purchase will be completed in a week, and |
| meanwhile you will remain in Birmingham and make yourself useful.' |
| |
| "'How?' |
| |
| "For answer, he took a big red book out of a drawer. |
| |
| "'This is a directory of Paris,' said he, 'with the trades after the |
| names of the people. I want you to take it home with you, and to mark |
| off all the hardware sellers, with their addresses. It would be of the |
| greatest use to me to have them.' |
| |
| "'Surely there are classified lists?' I suggested. |
| |
| "'Not reliable ones. Their system is different from ours. Stick at it, |
| and let me have the lists by Monday, at twelve. Good-day, Mr. Pycroft. |
| If you continue to show zeal and intelligence you will find the company |
| a good master.' |
| |
| "I went back to the hotel with the big book under my arm, and with very |
| conflicting feelings in my breast. On the one hand, I was definitely |
| engaged and had a hundred pounds in my pocket; on the other, the look |
| of the offices, the absence of name on the wall, and other of the points |
| which would strike a business man had left a bad impression as to the |
| position of my employers. However, come what might, I had my money, so I |
| settled down to my task. All Sunday I was kept hard at work, and yet by |
| Monday I had only got as far as H. I went round to my employer, found |
| him in the same dismantled kind of room, and was told to keep at |
| it until Wednesday, and then come again. On Wednesday it was still |
| unfinished, so I hammered away until Friday--that is, yesterday. Then I |
| brought it round to Mr. Harry Pinner. |
| |
| "'Thank you very much,' said he; 'I fear that I underrated the |
| difficulty of the task. This list will be of very material assistance to |
| me.' |
| |
| "'It took some time,' said I. |
| |
| "'And now,' said he, 'I want you to make a list of the furniture shops, |
| for they all sell crockery.' |
| |
| "'Very good.' |
| |
| "'And you can come up to-morrow evening, at seven, and let me know how |
| you are getting on. Don't overwork yourself. A couple of hours at Day's |
| Music Hall in the evening would do you no harm after your labors.' He |
| laughed as he spoke, and I saw with a thrill that his second tooth upon |
| the left-hand side had been very badly stuffed with gold." |
| |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes rubbed his hands with delight, and I stared with |
| astonishment at our client. |
| |
| "You may well look surprised, Dr. Watson; but it is this way," said he: |
| "When I was speaking to the other chap in London, at the time that he |
| laughed at my not going to Mawson's, I happened to notice that his tooth |
| was stuffed in this very identical fashion. The glint of the gold in |
| each case caught my eye, you see. When I put that with the voice and |
| figure being the same, and only those things altered which might be |
| changed by a razor or a wig, I could not doubt that it was the same man. |
| Of course you expect two brothers to be alike, but not that they should |
| have the same tooth stuffed in the same way. He bowed me out, and I |
| found myself in the street, hardly knowing whether I was on my head or |
| my heels. Back I went to my hotel, put my head in a basin of cold water, |
| and tried to think it out. Why had he sent me from London to Birmingham? |
| Why had he got there before me? And why had he written a letter from |
| himself to himself? It was altogether too much for me, and I could make |
| no sense of it. And then suddenly it struck me that what was dark to me |
| might be very light to Mr. Sherlock Holmes. I had just time to get up to |
| town by the night train to see him this morning, and to bring you both |
| back with me to Birmingham." |
| |
| There was a pause after the stock-broker's clerk had concluded his |
| surprising experience. Then Sherlock Holmes cocked his eye at me, |
| leaning back on the cushions with a pleased and yet critical face, like |
| a connoisseur who has just taken his first sip of a comet vintage. |
| |
| "Rather fine, Watson, is it not?" said he. "There are points in it which |
| please me. I think that you will agree with me that an interview with |
| Mr. Arthur Harry Pinner in the temporary offices of the Franco-Midland |
| Hardware Company, Limited, would be a rather interesting experience for |
| both of us." |
| |
| "But how can we do it?" I asked. |
| |
| "Oh, easily enough," said Hall Pycroft, cheerily. "You are two friends |
| of mine who are in want of a billet, and what could be more natural than |
| that I should bring you both round to the managing director?" |
| |
| "Quite so, of course," said Holmes. "I should like to have a look at |
| the gentleman, and see if I can make anything of his little game. |
| What qualities have you, my friend, which would make your services |
| so valuable? or is it possible that--" He began biting his nails and |
| staring blankly out of the window, and we hardly drew another word from |
| him until we were in New Street. |
| |
| At seven o'clock that evening we were walking, the three of us, down |
| Corporation Street to the company's offices. |
| |
| "It is no use our being at all before our time," said our client. "He |
| only comes there to see me, apparently, for the place is deserted up to |
| the very hour he names." |
| |
| "That is suggestive," remarked Holmes. |
| |
| "By Jove, I told you so!" cried the clerk. "That's he walking ahead of |
| us there." |
| |
| He pointed to a smallish, dark, well-dressed man who was bustling along |
| the other side of the road. As we watched him he looked across at a boy |
| who was bawling out the latest edition of the evening paper, and running |
| over among the cabs and busses, he bought one from him. Then, clutching |
| it in his hand, he vanished through a door-way. |
| |
| "There he goes!" cried Hall Pycroft. "These are the company's offices |
| into which he has gone. Come with me, and I'll fix it up as easily as |
| possible." |
| |
| Following his lead, we ascended five stories, until we found ourselves |
| outside a half-opened door, at which our client tapped. A voice within |
| bade us enter, and we entered a bare, unfurnished room such as Hall |
| Pycroft had described. At the single table sat the man whom we had seen |
| in the street, with his evening paper spread out in front of him, and as |
| he looked up at us it seemed to me that I had never looked upon a face |
| which bore such marks of grief, and of something beyond grief--of a |
| horror such as comes to few men in a lifetime. His brow glistened with |
| perspiration, his cheeks were of the dull, dead white of a fish's belly, |
| and his eyes were wild and staring. He looked at his clerk as though he |
| failed to recognize him, and I could see by the astonishment depicted |
| upon our conductor's face that this was by no means the usual appearance |
| of his employer. |
| |
| "You look ill, Mr. Pinner!" he exclaimed. |
| |
| "Yes, I am not very well," answered the other, making obvious efforts |
| to pull himself together, and licking his dry lips before he spoke. "Who |
| are these gentlemen whom you have brought with you?" |
| |
| "One is Mr. Harris, of Bermondsey, and the other is Mr. Price, of this |
| town," said our clerk, glibly. "They are friends of mine and gentlemen |
| of experience, but they have been out of a place for some little time, |
| and they hoped that perhaps you might find an opening for them in the |
| company's employment." |
| |
| "Very possibly! Very possibly!" cried Mr. Pinner with a ghastly smile. |
| "Yes, I have no doubt that we shall be able to do something for you. |
| What is your particular line, Mr. Harris?" |
| |
| "I am an accountant," said Holmes. |
| |
| "Ah yes, we shall want something of the sort. And you, Mr. Price?" |
| |
| "A clerk," said I. |
| |
| "I have every hope that the company may accommodate you. I will let you |
| know about it as soon as we come to any conclusion. And now I beg that |
| you will go. For God's sake leave me to myself!" |
| |
| These last words were shot out of him, as though the constraint which |
| he was evidently setting upon himself had suddenly and utterly burst |
| asunder. Holmes and I glanced at each other, and Hall Pycroft took a |
| step towards the table. |
| |
| "You forget, Mr. Pinner, that I am here by appointment to receive some |
| directions from you," said he. |
| |
| "Certainly, Mr. Pycroft, certainly," the other resumed in a calmer tone. |
| "You may wait here a moment; and there is no reason why your friends |
| should not wait with you. I will be entirely at your service in three |
| minutes, if I might trespass upon your patience so far." He rose with a |
| very courteous air, and, bowing to us, he passed out through a door at |
| the farther end of the room, which he closed behind him. |
| |
| "What now?" whispered Holmes. "Is he giving us the slip?" |
| |
| "Impossible," answered Pycroft. |
| |
| "Why so?" |
| |
| "That door leads into an inner room." |
| |
| "There is no exit?" |
| |
| "None." |
| |
| "Is it furnished?" |
| |
| "It was empty yesterday." |
| |
| "Then what on earth can he be doing? There is something which I don't |
| understand in this manner. If ever a man was three parts mad with |
| terror, that man's name is Pinner. What can have put the shivers on |
| him?" |
| |
| "He suspects that we are detectives," I suggested. |
| |
| "That's it," cried Pycroft. |
| |
| Holmes shook his head. "He did not turn pale. He was pale when we |
| entered the room," said he. "It is just possible that--" |
| |
| His words were interrupted by a sharp rat-tat from the direction of the |
| inner door. |
| |
| "What the deuce is he knocking at his own door for?" cried the clerk. |
| |
| Again and much louder came the rat-tat-tat. We all gazed expectantly at |
| the closed door. Glancing at Holmes, I saw his face turn rigid, and he |
| leaned forward in intense excitement. Then suddenly came a low guggling, |
| gargling sound, and a brisk drumming upon woodwork. Holmes sprang |
| frantically across the room and pushed at the door. It was fastened on |
| the inner side. Following his example, we threw ourselves upon it with |
| all our weight. One hinge snapped, then the other, and down came the |
| door with a crash. Rushing over it, we found ourselves in the inner |
| room. It was empty. |
| |
| But it was only for a moment that we were at fault. At one corner, the |
| corner nearest the room which we had left, there was a second door. |
| Holmes sprang to it and pulled it open. A coat and waistcoat were lying |
| on the floor, and from a hook behind the door, with his own braces |
| round his neck, was hanging the managing director of the Franco-Midland |
| Hardware Company. His knees were drawn up, his head hung at a dreadful |
| angle to his body, and the clatter of his heels against the door made |
| the noise which had broken in upon our conversation. In an instant I |
| had caught him round the waist, and held him up while Holmes and Pycroft |
| untied the elastic bands which had disappeared between the livid creases |
| of skin. Then we carried him into the other room, where he lay with |
| a clay-colored face, puffing his purple lips in and out with every |
| breath--a dreadful wreck of all that he had been but five minutes |
| before. |
| |
| "What do you think of him, Watson?" asked Holmes. |
| |
| I stooped over him and examined him. His pulse was feeble and |
| intermittent, but his breathing grew longer, and there was a little |
| shivering of his eyelids, which showed a thin white slit of ball |
| beneath. |
| |
| "It has been touch and go with him," said I, "but he'll live now. Just |
| open that window, and hand me the water carafe." I undid his collar, |
| poured the cold water over his face, and raised and sank his arms until |
| he drew a long, natural breath. "It's only a question of time now," said |
| I, as I turned away from him. |
| |
| Holmes stood by the table, with his hands deep in his trouser's pockets |
| and his chin upon his breast. |
| |
| "I suppose we ought to call the police in now," said he. "And yet I |
| confess that I'd like to give them a complete case when they come." |
| |
| "It's a blessed mystery to me," cried Pycroft, scratching his head. |
| "Whatever they wanted to bring me all the way up here for, and then--" |
| |
| "Pooh! All that is clear enough," said Holmes impatiently. "It is this |
| last sudden move." |
| |
| "You understand the rest, then?" |
| |
| "I think that it is fairly obvious. What do you say, Watson?" |
| |
| I shrugged my shoulders. "I must confess that I am out of my depths," |
| said I. |
| |
| "Oh surely if you consider the events at first they can only point to |
| one conclusion." |
| |
| "What do you make of them?" |
| |
| "Well, the whole thing hinges upon two points. The first is the making |
| of Pycroft write a declaration by which he entered the service of this |
| preposterous company. Do you not see how very suggestive that is?" |
| |
| "I am afraid I miss the point." |
| |
| "Well, why did they want him to do it? Not as a business matter, for |
| these arrangements are usually verbal, and there was no earthly business |
| reason why this should be an exception. Don't you see, my young friend, |
| that they were very anxious to obtain a specimen of your handwriting, |
| and had no other way of doing it?" |
| |
| "And why?" |
| |
| "Quite so. Why? When we answer that we have made some progress with our |
| little problem. Why? There can be only one adequate reason. Some one |
| wanted to learn to imitate your writing, and had to procure a specimen |
| of it first. And now if we pass on to the second point we find that each |
| throws light upon the other. That point is the request made by Pinner |
| that you should not resign your place, but should leave the manager of |
| this important business in the full expectation that a Mr. Hall Pycroft, |
| whom he had never seen, was about to enter the office upon the Monday |
| morning." |
| |
| "My God!" cried our client, "what a blind beetle I have been!" |
| |
| "Now you see the point about the handwriting. Suppose that some one |
| turned up in your place who wrote a completely different hand from that |
| in which you had applied for the vacancy, of course the game would have |
| been up. But in the interval the rogue had learned to imitate you, |
| and his position was therefore secure, as I presume that nobody in the |
| office had ever set eyes upon you." |
| |
| "Not a soul," groaned Hall Pycroft. |
| |
| "Very good. Of course it was of the utmost importance to prevent you |
| from thinking better of it, and also to keep you from coming into |
| contact with any one who might tell you that your double was at work |
| in Mawson's office. Therefore they gave you a handsome advance on your |
| salary, and ran you off to the Midlands, where they gave you enough work |
| to do to prevent your going to London, where you might have burst their |
| little game up. That is all plain enough." |
| |
| "But why should this man pretend to be his own brother?" |
| |
| "Well, that is pretty clear also. There are evidently only two of them |
| in it. The other is impersonating you at the office. This one acted |
| as your engager, and then found that he could not find you an employer |
| without admitting a third person into his plot. That he was most |
| unwilling to do. He changed his appearance as far as he could, and |
| trusted that the likeness, which you could not fail to observe, would be |
| put down to a family resemblance. But for the happy chance of the gold |
| stuffing, your suspicions would probably never have been aroused." |
| |
| Hall Pycroft shook his clinched hands in the air. "Good Lord!" he cried, |
| "while I have been fooled in this way, what has this other Hall Pycroft |
| been doing at Mawson's? What should we do, Mr. Holmes? Tell me what to |
| do." |
| |
| "We must wire to Mawson's." |
| |
| "They shut at twelve on Saturdays." |
| |
| "Never mind. There may be some door-keeper or attendant--" |
| |
| "Ah yes, they keep a permanent guard there on account of the value of |
| the securities that they hold. I remember hearing it talked of in the |
| City." |
| |
| "Very good; we shall wire to him, and see if all is well, and if a clerk |
| of your name is working there. That is clear enough; but what is not so |
| clear is why at sight of us one of the rogues should instantly walk out |
| of the room and hang himself." |
| |
| "The paper!" croaked a voice behind us. The man was sitting up, blanched |
| and ghastly, with returning reason in his eyes, and hands which rubbed |
| nervously at the broad red band which still encircled his throat. |
| |
| "The paper! Of course!" yelled Holmes, in a paroxysm of excitement. |
| "Idiot that I was! I thought so much of our visit that the paper never |
| entered my head for an instant. To be sure, the secret must be there." |
| He flattened it out upon the table, and a cry of triumph burst from his |
| lips. "Look at this, Watson," he cried. "It is a London paper, an early |
| edition of the Evening Standard. Here is what we want. Look at the |
| headlines: 'Crime in the City. Murder at Mawson & Williams's. Gigantic |
| attempted Robbery. Capture of the Criminal.' Here, Watson, we are all |
| equally anxious to hear it, so kindly read it aloud to us." |
| |
| It appeared from its position in the paper to have been the one event of |
| importance in town, and the account of it ran in this way: |
| |
| "A desperate attempt at robbery, culminating in the death of one man and |
| the capture of the criminal, occurred this afternoon in the City. For |
| some time back Mawson & Williams, the famous financial house, have been |
| the guardians of securities which amount in the aggregate to a sum of |
| considerably over a million sterling. So conscious was the manager of |
| the responsibility which devolved upon him in consequence of the great |
| interests at stake that safes of the very latest construction have |
| been employed, and an armed watchman has been left day and night in the |
| building. It appears that last week a new clerk named Hall Pycroft was |
| engaged by the firm. This person appears to have been none other that |
| Beddington, the famous forger and cracksman, who, with his brother, had |
| only recently emerged from a five years' spell of penal servitude. By |
| some means, which are not yet clear, he succeeded in winning, under a |
| false name, this official position in the office, which he utilized in |
| order to obtain moulding of various locks, and a thorough knowledge of |
| the position of the strong room and the safes. |
| |
| "It is customary at Mawson's for the clerks to leave at midday on |
| Saturday. Sergeant Tuson, of the City Police, was somewhat surprised, |
| therefore to see a gentleman with a carpet bag come down the steps at |
| twenty minutes past one. His suspicions being aroused, the sergeant |
| followed the man, and with the aid of Constable Pollock succeeded, after |
| a most desperate resistance, in arresting him. It was at once clear |
| that a daring and gigantic robbery had been committed. Nearly a hundred |
| thousand pounds' worth of American railway bonds, with a large amount |
| of scrip in mines and other companies, was discovered in the bag. On |
| examining the premises the body of the unfortunate watchman was found |
| doubled up and thrust into the largest of the safes, where it would not |
| have been discovered until Monday morning had it not been for the prompt |
| action of Sergeant Tuson. The man's skull had been shattered by a |
| blow from a poker delivered from behind. There could be no doubt |
| that Beddington had obtained entrance by pretending that he had left |
| something behind him, and having murdered the watchman, rapidly rifled |
| the large safe, and then made off with his booty. His brother, who |
| usually works with him, has not appeared in this job as far as can |
| at present be ascertained, although the police are making energetic |
| inquiries as to his whereabouts." |
| |
| "Well, we may save the police some little trouble in that direction," |
| said Holmes, glancing at the haggard figure huddled up by the window. |
| "Human nature is a strange mixture, Watson. You see that even a villain |
| and murderer can inspire such affection that his brother turns to |
| suicide when he learns that his neck is forfeited. However, we have |
| no choice as to our action. The doctor and I will remain on guard, Mr. |
| Pycroft, if you will have the kindness to step out for the police." |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure IV. The "_Gloria Scott_" |
| |
| |
| "I have some papers here," said my friend Sherlock Holmes, as we sat |
| one winter's night on either side of the fire, "which I really think, |
| Watson, that it would be worth your while to glance over. These are the |
| documents in the extraordinary case of the Gloria Scott, and this is the |
| message which struck Justice of the Peace Trevor dead with horror when |
| he read it." |
| |
| He had picked from a drawer a little tarnished cylinder, and, undoing |
| the tape, he handed me a short note scrawled upon a half-sheet of |
| slate-gray paper. |
| |
| "The supply of game for London is going steadily up," it ran. |
| "Head-keeper Hudson, we believe, has been now told to receive all orders |
| for fly-paper and for preservation of your hen-pheasant's life." |
| |
| As I glanced up from reading this enigmatical message, I saw Holmes |
| chuckling at the expression upon my face. |
| |
| "You look a little bewildered," said he. |
| |
| "I cannot see how such a message as this could inspire horror. It seems |
| to me to be rather grotesque than otherwise." |
| |
| "Very likely. Yet the fact remains that the reader, who was a fine, |
| robust old man, was knocked clean down by it as if it had been the butt |
| end of a pistol." |
| |
| "You arouse my curiosity," said I. "But why did you say just now that |
| there were very particular reasons why I should study this case?" |
| |
| "Because it was the first in which I was ever engaged." |
| |
| I had often endeavored to elicit from my companion what had first turned |
| his mind in the direction of criminal research, but had never caught him |
| before in a communicative humor. Now he sat forward in this arm-chair |
| and spread out the documents upon his knees. Then he lit his pipe and |
| sat for some time smoking and turning them over. |
| |
| "You never heard me talk of Victor Trevor?" he asked. "He was the only |
| friend I made during the two years I was at college. I was never a very |
| sociable fellow, Watson, always rather fond of moping in my rooms and |
| working out my own little methods of thought, so that I never mixed |
| much with the men of my year. Bar fencing and boxing I had few athletic |
| tastes, and then my line of study was quite distinct from that of the |
| other fellows, so that we had no points of contact at all. Trevor was |
| the only man I knew, and that only through the accident of his bull |
| terrier freezing on to my ankle one morning as I went down to chapel. |
| |
| "It was a prosaic way of forming a friendship, but it was effective. |
| I was laid by the heels for ten days, but Trevor used to come in to |
| inquire after me. At first it was only a minute's chat, but soon his |
| visits lengthened, and before the end of the term we were close friends. |
| He was a hearty, full-blooded fellow, full of spirits and energy, |
| the very opposite to me in most respects, but we had some subjects |
| in common, and it was a bond of union when I found that he was as |
| friendless as I. Finally, he invited me down to his father's place at |
| Donnithorpe, in Norfolk, and I accepted his hospitality for a month of |
| the long vacation. |
| |
| "Old Trevor was evidently a man of some wealth and consideration, a |
| J.P., and a landed proprietor. Donnithorpe is a little hamlet just to |
| the north of Langmere, in the country of the Broads. The house was |
| an old-fashioned, wide-spread, oak-beamed brick building, with a fine |
| lime-lined avenue leading up to it. There was excellent wild-duck |
| shooting in the fens, remarkably good fishing, a small but select |
| library, taken over, as I understood, from a former occupant, and a |
| tolerable cook, so that he would be a fastidious man who could not put |
| in a pleasant month there. |
| |
| "Trevor senior was a widower, and my friend his only son. |
| |
| "There had been a daughter, I heard, but she had died of diphtheria |
| while on a visit to Birmingham. The father interested me extremely. |
| He was a man of little culture, but with a considerable amount of rude |
| strength, both physically and mentally. He knew hardly any books, but |
| he had traveled far, had seen much of the world. And had remembered |
| all that he had learned. In person he was a thick-set, burly man with |
| a shock of grizzled hair, a brown, weather-beaten face, and blue eyes |
| which were keen to the verge of fierceness. Yet he had a reputation for |
| kindness and charity on the country-side, and was noted for the leniency |
| of his sentences from the bench. |
| |
| "One evening, shortly after my arrival, we were sitting over a glass of |
| port after dinner, when young Trevor began to talk about those habits |
| of observation and inference which I had already formed into a system, |
| although I had not yet appreciated the part which they were to play in |
| my life. The old man evidently thought that his son was exaggerating in |
| his description of one or two trivial feats which I had performed. |
| |
| "'Come, now, Mr. Holmes,' said he, laughing good-humoredly. 'I'm an |
| excellent subject, if you can deduce anything from me.' |
| |
| "'I fear there is not very much,' I answered; 'I might suggest that |
| you have gone about in fear of some personal attack within the last |
| twelvemonth.' |
| |
| "The laugh faded from his lips, and he stared at me in great surprise. |
| |
| "'Well, that's true enough,' said he. 'You know, Victor,' turning to his |
| son, 'when we broke up that poaching gang they swore to knife us, and |
| Sir Edward Holly has actually been attacked. I've always been on my |
| guard since then, though I have no idea how you know it.' |
| |
| "'You have a very handsome stick,' I answered. 'By the inscription I |
| observed that you had not had it more than a year. But you have taken |
| some pains to bore the head of it and pour melted lead into the hole so |
| as to make it a formidable weapon. I argued that you would not take such |
| precautions unless you had some danger to fear.' |
| |
| "'Anything else?' he asked, smiling. |
| |
| "'You have boxed a good deal in your youth.' |
| |
| "'Right again. How did you know it? Is my nose knocked a little out of |
| the straight?' |
| |
| "'No,' said I. 'It is your ears. They have the peculiar flattening and |
| thickening which marks the boxing man.' |
| |
| "'Anything else?' |
| |
| "'You have done a good deal of digging by your callosities.' |
| |
| "'Made all my money at the gold fields.' |
| |
| "'You have been in New Zealand.' |
| |
| "'Right again.' |
| |
| "'You have visited Japan.' |
| |
| "'Quite true.' |
| |
| "'And you have been most intimately associated with some one whose |
| initials were J. A., and whom you afterwards were eager to entirely |
| forget.' |
| |
| "Mr. Trevor stood slowly up, fixed his large blue eyes upon me with a |
| strange wild stare, and then pitched forward, with his face among the |
| nutshells which strewed the cloth, in a dead faint. |
| |
| "You can imagine, Watson, how shocked both his son and I were. His |
| attack did not last long, however, for when we undid his collar, and |
| sprinkled the water from one of the finger-glasses over his face, he |
| gave a gasp or two and sat up. |
| |
| "'Ah, boys,' said he, forcing a smile, 'I hope I haven't frightened you. |
| Strong as I look, there is a weak place in my heart, and it does not |
| take much to knock me over. I don't know how you manage this, Mr. |
| Holmes, but it seems to me that all the detectives of fact and of fancy |
| would be children in your hands. That's your line of life, sir, and you |
| may take the word of a man who has seen something of the world.' |
| |
| "And that recommendation, with the exaggerated estimate of my ability |
| with which he prefaced it, was, if you will believe me, Watson, the very |
| first thing which ever made me feel that a profession might be made |
| out of what had up to that time been the merest hobby. At the moment, |
| however, I was too much concerned at the sudden illness of my host to |
| think of anything else. |
| |
| "'I hope that I have said nothing to pain you?' said I. |
| |
| "'Well, you certainly touched upon rather a tender point. Might I ask |
| how you know, and how much you know?' He spoke now in a half-jesting |
| fashion, but a look of terror still lurked at the back of his eyes. |
| |
| "'It is simplicity itself,' said I. 'When you bared your arm to draw |
| that fish into the boat I saw that J. A. Had been tattooed in the bend |
| of the elbow. The letters were still legible, but it was perfectly clear |
| from their blurred appearance, and from the staining of the skin round |
| them, that efforts had been made to obliterate them. It was obvious, |
| then, that those initials had once been very familiar to you, and that |
| you had afterwards wished to forget them.' |
| |
| "What an eye you have!" he cried, with a sigh of relief. 'It is just as |
| you say. But we won't talk of it. Of all ghosts the ghosts of our old |
| lovers are the worst. Come into the billiard-room and have a quiet |
| cigar.' |
| |
| |
| "From that day, amid all his cordiality, there was always a touch of |
| suspicion in Mr. Trevor's manner towards me. Even his son remarked it. |
| 'You've given the governor such a turn,' said he, 'that he'll never be |
| sure again of what you know and what you don't know.' He did not mean |
| to show it, I am sure, but it was so strongly in his mind that it peeped |
| out at every action. At last I became so convinced that I was causing |
| him uneasiness that I drew my visit to a close. On the very day, |
| however, before I left, and incident occurred which proved in the sequel |
| to be of importance. |
| |
| "We were sitting out upon the lawn on garden chairs, the three of us, |
| basking in the sun and admiring the view across the Broads, when a maid |
| came out to say that there was a man at the door who wanted to see Mr. |
| Trevor. |
| |
| "'What is his name?' asked my host. |
| |
| "'He would not give any.' |
| |
| "'What does he want, then?' |
| |
| "'He says that you know him, and that he only wants a moment's |
| conversation.' |
| |
| "'Show him round here.' An instant afterwards there appeared a little |
| wizened fellow with a cringing manner and a shambling style of |
| walking. He wore an open jacket, with a splotch of tar on the sleeve, |
| a red-and-black check shirt, dungaree trousers, and heavy boots badly |
| worn. His face was thin and brown and crafty, with a perpetual smile |
| upon it, which showed an irregular line of yellow teeth, and his |
| crinkled hands were half closed in a way that is distinctive of sailors. |
| As he came slouching across the lawn I heard Mr. Trevor make a sort of |
| hiccoughing noise in his throat, and jumping out of his chair, he ran |
| into the house. He was back in a moment, and I smelt a strong reek of |
| brandy as he passed me. |
| |
| "'Well, my man,' said he. 'What can I do for you?' |
| |
| "The sailor stood looking at him with puckered eyes, and with the same |
| loose-lipped smile upon his face. |
| |
| "'You don't know me?' he asked. |
| |
| "'Why, dear me, it is surely Hudson,' said Mr. Trevor in a tone of |
| surprise. |
| |
| "'Hudson it is, sir,' said the seaman. 'Why, it's thirty year and more |
| since I saw you last. Here you are in your house, and me still picking |
| my salt meat out of the harness cask.' |
| |
| "'Tut, you will find that I have not forgotten old times,' cried Mr. |
| Trevor, and, walking towards the sailor, he said something in a low |
| voice. 'Go into the kitchen,' he continued out loud, 'and you will get |
| food and drink. I have no doubt that I shall find you a situation.' |
| |
| "'Thank you, sir,' said the seaman, touching his fore-lock. 'I'm just |
| off a two-yearer in an eight-knot tramp, short-handed at that, and I |
| wants a rest. I thought I'd get it either with Mr. Beddoes or with you.' |
| |
| "'Ah!' cried Trevor. 'You know where Mr. Beddoes is?' |
| |
| "'Bless you, sir, I know where all my old friends are,' said the |
| fellow with a sinister smile, and he slouched off after the maid to the |
| kitchen. Mr. Trevor mumbled something to us about having been shipmate |
| with the man when he was going back to the diggings, and then, leaving |
| us on the lawn, he went indoors. An hour later, when we entered the |
| house, we found him stretched dead drunk upon the dining-room sofa. The |
| whole incident left a most ugly impression upon my mind, and I was |
| not sorry next day to leave Donnithorpe behind me, for I felt that my |
| presence must be a source of embarrassment to my friend. |
| |
| "All this occurred during the first month of the long vacation. I went |
| up to my London rooms, where I spent seven weeks working out a few |
| experiments in organic chemistry. One day, however, when the autumn was |
| far advanced and the vacation drawing to a close, I received a telegram |
| from my friend imploring me to return to Donnithorpe, and saying that |
| he was in great need of my advice and assistance. Of course I dropped |
| everything and set out for the North once more. |
| |
| "He met me with the dog-cart at the station, and I saw at a glance that |
| the last two months had been very trying ones for him. He had grown thin |
| and careworn, and had lost the loud, cheery manner for which he had been |
| remarkable. |
| |
| "'The governor is dying,' were the first words he said. |
| |
| "'Impossible!' I cried. 'What is the matter?' |
| |
| "'Apoplexy. Nervous shock, He's been on the verge all day. I doubt if we |
| shall find him alive.' |
| |
| "I was, as you may think, Watson, horrified at this unexpected news. |
| |
| "'What has caused it?' I asked. |
| |
| "'Ah, that is the point. Jump in and we can talk it over while we drive. |
| You remember that fellow who came upon the evening before you left us?' |
| |
| "'Perfectly.' |
| |
| "'Do you know who it was that we let into the house that day?' |
| |
| "'I have no idea.' |
| |
| "'It was the devil, Holmes,' he cried. |
| |
| "I stared at him in astonishment. |
| |
| "'Yes, it was the devil himself. We have not had a peaceful hour |
| since--not one. The governor has never held up his head from that |
| evening, and now the life has been crushed out of him and his heart |
| broken, all through this accursed Hudson.' |
| |
| "'What power had he, then?' |
| |
| "'Ah, that is what I would give so much to know. The kindly, charitable, |
| good old governor--how could he have fallen into the clutches of such a |
| ruffian! But I am so glad that you have come, Holmes. I trust very much |
| to your judgment and discretion, and I know that you will advise me for |
| the best.' |
| |
| "We were dashing along the smooth white country road, with the long |
| stretch of the Broads in front of us glimmering in the red light of the |
| setting sun. From a grove upon our left I could already see the high |
| chimneys and the flag-staff which marked the squire's dwelling. |
| |
| "'My father made the fellow gardener,' said my companion, 'and then, as |
| that did not satisfy him, he was promoted to be butler. The house seemed |
| to be at his mercy, and he wandered about and did what he chose in it. |
| The maids complained of his drunken habits and his vile language. The |
| dad raised their wages all round to recompense them for the annoyance. |
| The fellow would take the boat and my father's best gun and treat |
| himself to little shooting trips. And all this with such a sneering, |
| leering, insolent face that I would have knocked him down twenty times |
| over if he had been a man of my own age. I tell you, Holmes, I have |
| had to keep a tight hold upon myself all this time; and now I am asking |
| myself whether, if I had let myself go a little more, I might not have |
| been a wiser man. |
| |
| "'Well, matters went from bad to worse with us, and this animal Hudson |
| became more and more intrusive, until at last, on making some insolent |
| reply to my father in my presence one day, I took him by the shoulders |
| and turned him out of the room. He slunk away with a livid face and two |
| venomous eyes which uttered more threats than his tongue could do. I |
| don't know what passed between the poor dad and him after that, but the |
| dad came to me next day and asked me whether I would mind apologizing to |
| Hudson. I refused, as you can imagine, and asked my father how he |
| could allow such a wretch to take such liberties with himself and his |
| household. |
| |
| "'"Ah, my boy," said he, "it is all very well to talk, but you don't |
| know how I am placed. But you shall know, Victor. I'll see that you |
| shall know, come what may. You wouldn't believe harm of your poor old |
| father, would you, lad?" He was very much moved, and shut himself up |
| in the study all day, where I could see through the window that he was |
| writing busily. |
| |
| "'That evening there came what seemed to me to be a grand release, |
| for Hudson told us that he was going to leave us. He walked into the |
| dining-room as we sat after dinner, and announced his intention in the |
| thick voice of a half-drunken man. |
| |
| "'"I've had enough of Norfolk," said he. "I'll run down to Mr. Beddoes |
| in Hampshire. He'll be as glad to see me as you were, I dare say." |
| |
| "'"You're not going away in an unkind spirit, Hudson, I hope," said my |
| father, with a tameness which made my blood boil. |
| |
| "'"I've not had my 'pology," said he sulkily, glancing in my direction. |
| |
| "'"Victor, you will acknowledge that you have used this worthy fellow |
| rather roughly," said the dad, turning to me. |
| |
| "'"On the contrary, I think that we have both shown extraordinary |
| patience towards him," I answered. |
| |
| "'"Oh, you do, do you?" he snarls. "Very good, mate. We'll see about |
| that!" |
| |
| "'He slouched out of the room, and half an hour afterwards left the |
| house, leaving my father in a state of pitiable nervousness. Night after |
| night I heard him pacing his room, and it was just as he was recovering |
| his confidence that the blow did at last fall.' |
| |
| "'And how?' I asked eagerly. |
| |
| "'In a most extraordinary fashion. A letter arrived for my father |
| yesterday evening, bearing the Fordingbridge post-mark. My father read |
| it, clapped both his hands to his head, and began running round the room |
| in little circles like a man who has been driven out of his senses. When |
| I at last drew him down on to the sofa, his mouth and eyelids were all |
| puckered on one side, and I saw that he had a stroke. Dr. Fordham came |
| over at once. We put him to bed; but the paralysis has spread, he has |
| shown no sign of returning consciousness, and I think that we shall |
| hardly find him alive.' |
| |
| "'You horrify me, Trevor!' I cried. 'What then could have been in this |
| letter to cause so dreadful a result?' |
| |
| "'Nothing. There lies the inexplicable part of it. The message was |
| absurd and trivial. Ah, my God, it is as I feared!' |
| |
| "As he spoke we came round the curve of the avenue, and saw in the |
| fading light that every blind in the house had been drawn down. As |
| we dashed up to the door, my friend's face convulsed with grief, a |
| gentleman in black emerged from it. |
| |
| "'When did it happen, doctor?' asked Trevor. |
| |
| "'Almost immediately after you left.' |
| |
| "'Did he recover consciousness?' |
| |
| "'For an instant before the end.' |
| |
| "'Any message for me.' |
| |
| "'Only that the papers were in the back drawer of the Japanese cabinet.' |
| |
| "My friend ascended with the doctor to the chamber of death, while I |
| remained in the study, turning the whole matter over and over in my |
| head, and feeling as sombre as ever I had done in my life. What was the |
| past of this Trevor, pugilist, traveler, and gold-digger, and how had he |
| placed himself in the power of this acid-faced seaman? Why, too, should |
| he faint at an allusion to the half-effaced initials upon his arm, and |
| die of fright when he had a letter from Fordingham? Then I remembered |
| that Fordingham was in Hampshire, and that this Mr. Beddoes, whom the |
| seaman had gone to visit and presumably to blackmail, had also been |
| mentioned as living in Hampshire. The letter, then, might either come |
| from Hudson, the seaman, saying that he had betrayed the guilty secret |
| which appeared to exist, or it might come from Beddoes, warning an old |
| confederate that such a betrayal was imminent. So far it seemed clear |
| enough. But then how could this letter be trivial and grotesque, as |
| describe by the son? He must have misread it. If so, it must have been |
| one of those ingenious secret codes which mean one thing while they seem |
| to mean another. I must see this letter. If there were a hidden meaning |
| in it, I was confident that I could pluck it forth. For an hour I sat |
| pondering over it in the gloom, until at last a weeping maid brought in |
| a lamp, and close at her heels came my friend Trevor, pale but composed, |
| with these very papers which lie upon my knee held in his grasp. He sat |
| down opposite to me, drew the lamp to the edge of the table, and handed |
| me a short note scribbled, as you see, upon a single sheet of gray |
| paper. 'The supply of game for London is going steadily up,' it ran. |
| 'Head-keeper Hudson, we believe, has been now told to receive all orders |
| for fly-paper and for preservation of your hen-pheasant's life.' |
| |
| "I dare say my face looked as bewildered as yours did just now when |
| first I read this message. Then I reread it very carefully. It was |
| evidently as I had thought, and some secret meaning must lie buried |
| in this strange combination of words. Or could it be that there was |
| a prearranged significance to such phrases as 'fly-paper' and |
| 'hen-pheasant'? Such a meaning would be arbitrary and could not be |
| deduced in any way. And yet I was loath to believe that this was the |
| case, and the presence of the word Hudson seemed to show that the |
| subject of the message was as I had guessed, and that it was from |
| Beddoes rather than the sailor. I tried it backwards, but the |
| combination 'life pheasant's hen' was not encouraging. Then I tried |
| alternate words, but neither 'the of for' nor 'supply game London' |
| promised to throw any light upon it. |
| |
| "And then in an instant the key of the riddle was in my hands, and I saw |
| that every third word, beginning with the first, would give a message |
| which might well drive old Trevor to despair. |
| |
| "It was short and terse, the warning, as I now read it to my companion: |
| |
| "'The game is up. Hudson has told all. Fly for your life.' |
| |
| "Victor Trevor sank his face into his shaking hands. 'It must be that, |
| I suppose,' said he. "This is worse than death, for it means disgrace |
| as well. But what is the meaning of these "head-keepers" and |
| "hen-pheasants"?' |
| |
| "'It means nothing to the message, but it might mean a good deal to us |
| if we had no other means of discovering the sender. You see that he has |
| begun by writing "The...game...is," and so on. Afterwards he had, to |
| fulfill the prearranged cipher, to fill in any two words in each space. |
| He would naturally use the first words which came to his mind, and |
| if there were so many which referred to sport among them, you may |
| be tolerably sure that he is either an ardent shot or interested in |
| breeding. Do you know anything of this Beddoes?' |
| |
| "'Why, now that you mention it,' said he, 'I remember that my poor |
| father used to have an invitation from him to shoot over his preserves |
| every autumn.' |
| |
| "'Then it is undoubtedly from him that the note comes,' said I. 'It only |
| remains for us to find out what this secret was which the sailor Hudson |
| seems to have held over the heads of these two wealthy and respected |
| men.' |
| |
| "'Alas, Holmes, I fear that it is one of sin and shame!' cried my |
| friend. 'But from you I shall have no secrets. Here is the statement |
| which was drawn up by my father when he knew that the danger from Hudson |
| had become imminent. I found it in the Japanese cabinet, as he told the |
| doctor. Take it and read it to me, for I have neither the strength nor |
| the courage to do it myself.' |
| |
| "These are the very papers, Watson, which he handed to me, and I will |
| read them to you, as I read them in the old study that night to him. |
| They are endorsed outside, as you see, 'Some particulars of the voyage |
| of the bark _Gloria Scott_, from her leaving Falmouth on the 8th |
| October, 1855, to her destruction in N. Lat. 15 degrees 20', W. Long. |
| 25 degrees 14' on Nov. 6th.' It is in the form of a letter, and runs in |
| this way: |
| |
| "'My dear, dear son, now that approaching disgrace begins to darken the |
| closing years of my life, I can write with all truth and honesty that it |
| is not the terror of the law, it is not the loss of my position in the |
| county, nor is it my fall in the eyes of all who have known me, which |
| cuts me to the heart; but it is the thought that you should come to |
| blush for me--you who love me and who have seldom, I hope, had reason to |
| do other than respect me. But if the blow falls which is forever hanging |
| over me, then I should wish you to read this, that you may know straight |
| from me how far I have been to blame. On the other hand, if all should |
| go well (which may kind God Almighty grant!), then if by any chance this |
| paper should be still undestroyed and should fall into your hands, I |
| conjure you, by all you hold sacred, by the memory of your dear mother, |
| and by the love which had been between us, to hurl it into the fire and |
| to never give one thought to it again. |
| |
| "'If then your eye goes on to read this line, I know that I shall |
| already have been exposed and dragged from my home, or as is more |
| likely, for you know that my heart is weak, by lying with my tongue |
| sealed forever in death. In either case the time for suppression is |
| past, and every word which I tell you is the naked truth, and this I |
| swear as I hope for mercy. |
| |
| "'My name, dear lad, is not Trevor. I was James Armitage in my younger |
| days, and you can understand now the shock that it was to me a few weeks |
| ago when your college friend addressed me in words which seemed to imply |
| that he had surprised my secret. As Armitage it was that I entered a |
| London banking-house, and as Armitage I was convicted of breaking my |
| country's laws, and was sentenced to transportation. Do not think very |
| harshly of me, laddie. It was a debt of honor, so called, which I had |
| to pay, and I used money which was not my own to do it, in the certainty |
| that I could replace it before there could be any possibility of its |
| being missed. But the most dreadful ill-luck pursued me. The money which |
| I had reckoned upon never came to hand, and a premature examination of |
| accounts exposed my deficit. The case might have been dealt leniently |
| with, but the laws were more harshly administered thirty years ago than |
| now, and on my twenty-third birthday I found myself chained as a felon |
| with thirty-seven other convicts in 'tween-decks of the bark _Gloria |
| Scott_, bound for Australia. |
| |
| "'It was the year '55 when the Crimean war was at its height, and the |
| old convict ships had been largely used as transports in the Black |
| Sea. The government was compelled, therefore, to use smaller and less |
| suitable vessels for sending out their prisoners. The Gloria Scott |
| had been in the Chinese tea-trade, but she was an old-fashioned, |
| heavy-bowed, broad-beamed craft, and the new clippers had cut her |
| out. She was a five-hundred-ton boat; and besides her thirty-eight |
| jail-birds, she carried twenty-six of a crew, eighteen soldiers, a |
| captain, three mates, a doctor, a chaplain, and four warders. Nearly a |
| hundred souls were in her, all told, when we set sail from Falmouth. |
| |
| "'The partitions between the cells of the convicts, instead of being of |
| thick oak, as is usual in convict-ships, were quite thin and frail. |
| The man next to me, upon the aft side, was one whom I had particularly |
| noticed when we were led down the quay. He was a young man with a |
| clear, hairless face, a long, thin nose, and rather nut-cracker jaws. |
| He carried his head very jauntily in the air, had a swaggering style |
| of walking, and was, above all else, remarkable for his extraordinary |
| height. I don't think any of our heads would have come up to his |
| shoulder, and I am sure that he could not have measured less than six |
| and a half feet. It was strange among so many sad and weary faces to see |
| one which was full of energy and resolution. The sight of it was to me |
| like a fire in a snow-storm. I was glad, then, to find that he was my |
| neighbor, and gladder still when, in the dead of the night, I heard a |
| whisper close to my ear, and found that he had managed to cut an opening |
| in the board which separated us. |
| |
| "'"Hullo, chummy!" said he, "what's your name, and what are you here |
| for?" |
| |
| "'I answered him, and asked in turn who I was talking with. |
| |
| "'"I'm Jack Prendergast," said he, "and by God! You'll learn to bless my |
| name before you've done with me." |
| |
| "'I remembered hearing of his case, for it was one which had made an |
| immense sensation throughout the country some time before my own arrest. |
| He was a man of good family and of great ability, but of incurably |
| vicious habits, who had by an ingenious system of fraud obtained huge |
| sums of money from the leading London merchants. |
| |
| "'"Ha, ha! You remember my case!" said he proudly. |
| |
| "'"Very well, indeed." |
| |
| "'"Then maybe you remember something queer about it?" |
| |
| "'"What was that, then?" |
| |
| "'"I'd had nearly a quarter of a million, hadn't I?" |
| |
| "'"So it was said." |
| |
| "'"But none was recovered, eh?" |
| |
| "'"No." |
| |
| "'"Well, where d'ye suppose the balance is?" he asked. |
| |
| "'"I have no idea," said I. |
| |
| "'"Right between my finger and thumb," he cried. "By God! I've got more |
| pounds to my name than you've hairs on your head. And if you've money, |
| my son, and know how to handle it and spread it, you can do anything. |
| Now, you don't think it likely that a man who could do anything is going |
| to wear his breeches out sitting in the stinking hold of a rat-gutted, |
| beetle-ridden, mouldy old coffin of a Chin China coaster. No, sir, such |
| a man will look after himself and will look after his chums. You may lay |
| to that! You hold on to him, and you may kiss the book that he'll haul |
| you through." |
| |
| "'That was his style of talk, and at first I thought it meant nothing; |
| but after a while, when he had tested me and sworn me in with all |
| possible solemnity, he let me understand that there really was a plot |
| to gain command of the vessel. A dozen of the prisoners had hatched it |
| before they came aboard, Prendergast was the leader, and his money was |
| the motive power. |
| |
| "'"I'd a partner," said he, "a rare good man, as true as a stock to a |
| barrel. He's got the dibbs, he has, and where do you think he is at this |
| moment? Why, he's the chaplain of this ship--the chaplain, no less! He |
| came aboard with a black coat, and his papers right, and money enough in |
| his box to buy the thing right up from keel to main-truck. The crew |
| are his, body and soul. He could buy 'em at so much a gross with a cash |
| discount, and he did it before ever they signed on. He's got two of the |
| warders and Mereer, the second mate, and he'd get the captain himself, |
| if he thought him worth it." |
| |
| "'"What are we to do, then?" I asked. |
| |
| "'"What do you think?" said he. "We'll make the coats of some of these |
| soldiers redder than ever the tailor did." |
| |
| "'"But they are armed," said I. |
| |
| "'"And so shall we be, my boy. There's a brace of pistols for every |
| mother's son of us, and if we can't carry this ship, with the crew at |
| our back, it's time we were all sent to a young misses' boarding-school. |
| You speak to your mate upon the left to-night, and see if he is to be |
| trusted." |
| |
| "'I did so, and found my other neighbor to be a young fellow in much |
| the same position as myself, whose crime had been forgery. His name was |
| Evans, but he afterwards changed it, like myself, and he is now a rich |
| and prosperous man in the south of England. He was ready enough to join |
| the conspiracy, as the only means of saving ourselves, and before we had |
| crossed the Bay there were only two of the prisoners who were not in the |
| secret. One of these was of weak mind, and we did not dare to trust him, |
| and the other was suffering from jaundice, and could not be of any use |
| to us. |
| |
| "'From the beginning there was really nothing to prevent us from taking |
| possession of the ship. The crew were a set of ruffians, specially |
| picked for the job. The sham chaplain came into our cells to exhort us, |
| carrying a black bag, supposed to be full of tracts, and so often did |
| he come that by the third day we had each stowed away at the foot of our |
| beds a file, a brace of pistols, a pound of powder, and twenty slugs. |
| Two of the warders were agents of Prendergast, and the second mate was |
| his right-hand man. The captain, the two mates, two warders Lieutenant |
| Martin, his eighteen soldiers, and the doctor were all that we had |
| against us. Yet, safe as it was, we determined to neglect no precaution, |
| and to make our attack suddenly by night. It came, however, more quickly |
| than we expected, and in this way. |
| |
| "'One evening, about the third week after our start, the doctor had come |
| down to see one of the prisoners who was ill, and putting his hand down |
| on the bottom of his bunk he felt the outline of the pistols. If he had |
| been silent he might have blown the whole thing, but he was a nervous |
| little chap, so he gave a cry of surprise and turned so pale that the |
| man knew what was up in an instant and seized him. He was gagged before |
| he could give the alarm, and tied down upon the bed. He had unlocked |
| the door that led to the deck, and we were through it in a rush. The two |
| sentries were shot down, and so was a corporal who came running to see |
| what was the matter. There were two more soldiers at the door of the |
| state-room, and their muskets seemed not to be loaded, for they never |
| fired upon us, and they were shot while trying to fix their bayonets. |
| Then we rushed on into the captain's cabin, but as we pushed open the |
| door there was an explosion from within, and there he lay with his |
| brains smeared over the chart of the Atlantic which was pinned upon the |
| table, while the chaplain stood with a smoking pistol in his hand at |
| his elbow. The two mates had both been seized by the crew, and the whole |
| business seemed to be settled. |
| |
| "'The state-room was next the cabin, and we flocked in there and flopped |
| down on the settees, all speaking together, for we were just mad with |
| the feeling that we were free once more. There were lockers all round, |
| and Wilson, the sham chaplain, knocked one of them in, and pulled out a |
| dozen of brown sherry. We cracked off the necks of the bottles, poured |
| the stuff out into tumblers, and were just tossing them off, when in an |
| instant without warning there came the roar of muskets in our ears, and |
| the saloon was so full of smoke that we could not see across the table. |
| When it cleared again the place was a shambles. Wilson and eight others |
| were wriggling on the top of each other on the floor, and the blood and |
| the brown sherry on that table turn me sick now when I think of it. We |
| were so cowed by the sight that I think we should have given the job up |
| if it had not been for Prendergast. He bellowed like a bull and rushed |
| for the door with all that were left alive at his heels. Out we ran, |
| and there on the poop were the lieutenant and ten of his men. The swing |
| skylights above the saloon table had been a bit open, and they had fired |
| on us through the slit. We got on them before they could load, and they |
| stood to it like men; but we had the upper hand of them, and in five |
| minutes it was all over. My God! Was there ever a slaughter-house |
| like that ship! Prendergast was like a raging devil, and he picked the |
| soldiers up as if they had been children and threw them overboard alive |
| or dead. There was one sergeant that was horribly wounded and yet kept |
| on swimming for a surprising time, until some one in mercy blew out his |
| brains. When the fighting was over there was no one left of our enemies |
| except just the warders the mates, and the doctor. |
| |
| "'It was over them that the great quarrel arose. There were many of us |
| who were glad enough to win back our freedom, and yet who had no wish |
| to have murder on our souls. It was one thing to knock the soldiers over |
| with their muskets in their hands, and it was another to stand by while |
| men were being killed in cold blood. Eight of us, five convicts and |
| three sailors, said that we would not see it done. But there was no |
| moving Prendergast and those who were with him. Our only chance of |
| safety lay in making a clean job of it, said he, and he would not leave |
| a tongue with power to wag in a witness-box. It nearly came to our |
| sharing the fate of the prisoners, but at last he said that if we wished |
| we might take a boat and go. We jumped at the offer, for we were already |
| sick of these bloodthirsty doings, and we saw that there would be worse |
| before it was done. We were given a suit of sailor togs each, a barrel |
| of water, two casks, one of junk and one of biscuits, and a compass. |
| Prendergast threw us over a chart, told us that we were shipwrecked |
| mariners whose ship had foundered in Lat. 15 degrees and Long 25 degrees |
| west, and then cut the painter and let us go. |
| |
| "'And now I come to the most surprising part of my story, my dear son. |
| The seamen had hauled the fore-yard aback during the rising, but now as |
| we left them they brought it square again, and as there was a light wind |
| from the north and east the bark began to draw slowly away from us. Our |
| boat lay, rising and falling, upon the long, smooth rollers, and Evans |
| and I, who were the most educated of the party, were sitting in the |
| sheets working out our position and planning what coast we should make |
| for. It was a nice question, for the Cape de Verdes were about five |
| hundred miles to the north of us, and the African coast about seven |
| hundred to the east. On the whole, as the wind was coming round to the |
| north, we thought that Sierra Leone might be best, and turned our head |
| in that direction, the bark being at that time nearly hull down on our |
| starboard quarter. Suddenly as we looked at her we saw a dense black |
| cloud of smoke shoot up from her, which hung like a monstrous tree upon |
| the sky line. A few seconds later a roar like thunder burst upon our |
| ears, and as the smoke thinned away there was no sign left of the |
| _Gloria Scott_. In an instant we swept the boat's head round again and |
| pulled with all our strength for the place where the haze still trailing |
| over the water marked the scene of this catastrophe. |
| |
| "'It was a long hour before we reached it, and at first we feared that |
| we had come too late to save any one. A splintered boat and a number of |
| crates and fragments of spars rising and falling on the waves showed us |
| where the vessel had foundered; but there was no sign of life, and we |
| had turned away in despair when we heard a cry for help, and saw at some |
| distance a piece of wreckage with a man lying stretched across it. When |
| we pulled him aboard the boat he proved to be a young seaman of the |
| name of Hudson, who was so burned and exhausted that he could give us no |
| account of what had happened until the following morning. |
| |
| "'It seemed that after we had left, Prendergast and his gang had |
| proceeded to put to death the five remaining prisoners. The two warders |
| had been shot and thrown overboard, and so also had the third mate. |
| Prendergast then descended into the 'tween-decks and with his own hands |
| cut the throat of the unfortunate surgeon. There only remained the first |
| mate, who was a bold and active man. When he saw the convict approaching |
| him with the bloody knife in his hand he kicked off his bonds, which he |
| had somehow contrived to loosen, and rushing down the deck he plunged |
| into the after-hold. A dozen convicts, who descended with their pistols |
| in search of him, found him with a match-box in his hand seated beside |
| an open powder-barrel, which was one of a hundred carried on board, and |
| swearing that he would blow all hands up if he were in any way molested. |
| An instant later the explosion occurred, though Hudson thought it was |
| caused by the misdirected bullet of one of the convicts rather than the |
| mate's match. Be the cause what it may, it was the end of the _Gloria |
| Scott_ and of the rabble who held command of her. |
| |
| "'Such, in a few words, my dear boy, is the history of this terrible |
| business in which I was involved. Next day we were picked up by the brig |
| _Hotspur_, bound for Australia, whose captain found no difficulty in |
| believing that we were the survivors of a passenger ship which had |
| foundered. The transport ship Gloria Scott was set down by the Admiralty |
| as being lost at sea, and no word has ever leaked out as to her true |
| fate. After an excellent voyage the _Hotspur_ landed us at Sydney, where |
| Evans and I changed our names and made our way to the diggings, |
| where, among the crowds who were gathered from all nations, we had no |
| difficulty in losing our former identities. The rest I need not relate. |
| We prospered, we traveled, we came back as rich colonials to England, |
| and we bought country estates. For more than twenty years we have |
| led peaceful and useful lives, and we hoped that our past was forever |
| buried. Imagine, then, my feelings when in the seaman who came to us I |
| recognized instantly the man who had been picked off the wreck. He had |
| tracked us down somehow, and had set himself to live upon our fears. You |
| will understand now how it was that I strove to keep the peace with him, |
| and you will in some measure sympathize with me in the fears which fill |
| me, now that he has gone from me to his other victim with threats upon |
| his tongue.' |
| |
| "Underneath is written in a hand so shaky as to be hardly legible, |
| 'Beddoes writes in cipher to say H. Has told all. Sweet Lord, have mercy |
| on our souls!' |
| |
| "That was the narrative which I read that night to young Trevor, and I |
| think, Watson, that under the circumstances it was a dramatic one. |
| The good fellow was heart-broken at it, and went out to the Terai tea |
| planting, where I hear that he is doing well. As to the sailor and |
| Beddoes, neither of them was ever heard of again after that day on which |
| the letter of warning was written. They both disappeared utterly and |
| completely. No complaint had been lodged with the police, so that |
| Beddoes had mistaken a threat for a deed. Hudson had been seen lurking |
| about, and it was believed by the police that he had done away with |
| Beddoes and had fled. For myself I believe that the truth was exactly |
| the opposite. I think that it is most probable that Beddoes, pushed to |
| desperation and believing himself to have been already betrayed, had |
| revenged himself upon Hudson, and had fled from the country with as much |
| money as he could lay his hands on. Those are the facts of the case, |
| Doctor, and if they are of any use to your collection, I am sure that |
| they are very heartily at your service." |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure V. The Musgrave Ritual |
| |
| |
| An anomaly which often struck me in the character of my friend Sherlock |
| Holmes was that, although in his methods of thought he was the neatest |
| and most methodical of mankind, and although also he affected a certain |
| quiet primness of dress, he was none the less in his personal habits one |
| of the most untidy men that ever drove a fellow-lodger to distraction. |
| Not that I am in the least conventional in that respect myself. The |
| rough-and-tumble work in Afghanistan, coming on the top of a natural |
| Bohemianism of disposition, has made me rather more lax than befits a |
| medical man. But with me there is a limit, and when I find a man who |
| keeps his cigars in the coal-scuttle, his tobacco in the toe end of |
| a Persian slipper, and his unanswered correspondence transfixed by a |
| jack-knife into the very centre of his wooden mantelpiece, then I begin |
| to give myself virtuous airs. I have always held, too, that pistol |
| practice should be distinctly an open-air pastime; and when Holmes, in |
| one of his queer humors, would sit in an arm-chair with his hair-trigger |
| and a hundred Boxer cartridges, and proceed to adorn the opposite |
| wall with a patriotic V. R. done in bullet-pocks, I felt strongly that |
| neither the atmosphere nor the appearance of our room was improved by |
| it. |
| |
| Our chambers were always full of chemicals and of criminal relics which |
| had a way of wandering into unlikely positions, and of turning up in |
| the butter-dish or in even less desirable places. But his papers were |
| my great crux. He had a horror of destroying documents, especially those |
| which were connected with his past cases, and yet it was only once in |
| every year or two that he would muster energy to docket and arrange |
| them; for, as I have mentioned somewhere in these incoherent memoirs, |
| the outbursts of passionate energy when he performed the remarkable |
| feats with which his name is associated were followed by reactions of |
| lethargy during which he would lie about with his violin and his books, |
| hardly moving save from the sofa to the table. Thus month after month |
| his papers accumulated, until every corner of the room was stacked with |
| bundles of manuscript which were on no account to be burned, and which |
| could not be put away save by their owner. One winter's night, as we |
| sat together by the fire, I ventured to suggest to him that, as he had |
| finished pasting extracts into his common-place book, he might employ |
| the next two hours in making our room a little more habitable. He could |
| not deny the justice of my request, so with a rather rueful face he went |
| off to his bedroom, from which he returned presently pulling a large tin |
| box behind him. This he placed in the middle of the floor and, squatting |
| down upon a stool in front of it, he threw back the lid. I could see |
| that it was already a third full of bundles of paper tied up with red |
| tape into separate packages. |
| |
| "There are cases enough here, Watson," said he, looking at me with |
| mischievous eyes. "I think that if you knew all that I had in this box |
| you would ask me to pull some out instead of putting others in." |
| |
| "These are the records of your early work, then?" I asked. "I have often |
| wished that I had notes of those cases." |
| |
| "Yes, my boy, these were all done prematurely before my biographer |
| had come to glorify me." He lifted bundle after bundle in a tender, |
| caressing sort of way. "They are not all successes, Watson," said he. |
| "But there are some pretty little problems among them. Here's the record |
| of the Tarleton murders, and the case of Vamberry, the wine merchant, |
| and the adventure of the old Russian woman, and the singular affair |
| of the aluminium crutch, as well as a full account of Ricoletti of the |
| club-foot, and his abominable wife. And here--ah, now, this really is |
| something a little recherché." |
| |
| He dived his arm down to the bottom of the chest, and brought up a small |
| wooden box with a sliding lid, such as children's toys are kept in. From |
| within he produced a crumpled piece of paper, and old-fashioned brass |
| key, a peg of wood with a ball of string attached to it, and three rusty |
| old disks of metal. |
| |
| "Well, my boy, what do you make of this lot?" he asked, smiling at my |
| expression. |
| |
| "It is a curious collection." |
| |
| "Very curious, and the story that hangs round it will strike you as |
| being more curious still." |
| |
| "These relics have a history then?" |
| |
| "So much so that they are history." |
| |
| "What do you mean by that?" |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes picked them up one by one, and laid them along the edge |
| of the table. Then he reseated himself in his chair and looked them over |
| with a gleam of satisfaction in his eyes. |
| |
| "These," said he, "are all that I have left to remind me of the |
| adventure of the Musgrave Ritual." |
| |
| I had heard him mention the case more than once, though I had never been |
| able to gather the details. "I should be so glad," said I, "if you would |
| give me an account of it." |
| |
| "And leave the litter as it is?" he cried, mischievously. "Your tidiness |
| won't bear much strain after all, Watson. But I should be glad that you |
| should add this case to your annals, for there are points in it which |
| make it quite unique in the criminal records of this or, I believe, |
| of any other country. A collection of my trifling achievements would |
| certainly be incomplete which contained no account of this very singular |
| business. |
| |
| "You may remember how the affair of the _Gloria Scott_, and my |
| conversation with the unhappy man whose fate I told you of, first turned |
| my attention in the direction of the profession which has become my |
| life's work. You see me now when my name has become known far and |
| wide, and when I am generally recognized both by the public and by the |
| official force as being a final court of appeal in doubtful cases. |
| Even when you knew me first, at the time of the affair which you have |
| commemorated in 'A Study in Scarlet,' I had already established a |
| considerable, though not a very lucrative, connection. You can hardly |
| realize, then, how difficult I found it at first, and how long I had to |
| wait before I succeeded in making any headway. |
| |
| "When I first came up to London I had rooms in Montague Street, just |
| round the corner from the British Museum, and there I waited, filling in |
| my too abundant leisure time by studying all those branches of science |
| which might make me more efficient. Now and again cases came in my way, |
| principally through the introduction of old fellow-students, for during |
| my last years at the University there was a good deal of talk there |
| about myself and my methods. The third of these cases was that of the |
| Musgrave Ritual, and it is to the interest which was aroused by that |
| singular chain of events, and the large issues which proved to be at |
| stake, that I trace my first stride towards the position which I now |
| hold. |
| |
| "Reginald Musgrave had been in the same college as myself, and I had |
| some slight acquaintance with him. He was not generally popular among |
| the undergraduates, though it always seemed to me that what was set down |
| as pride was really an attempt to cover extreme natural diffidence. |
| In appearance he was a man of exceedingly aristocratic type, thin, |
| high-nosed, and large-eyed, with languid and yet courtly manners. He was |
| indeed a scion of one of the very oldest families in the kingdom, |
| though his branch was a cadet one which had separated from the northern |
| Musgraves some time in the sixteenth century, and had established itself |
| in western Sussex, where the Manor House of Hurlstone is perhaps the |
| oldest inhabited building in the county. Something of his birth place |
| seemed to cling to the man, and I never looked at his pale, keen face |
| or the poise of his head without associating him with gray archways and |
| mullioned windows and all the venerable wreckage of a feudal keep. Once |
| or twice we drifted into talk, and I can remember that more than once he |
| expressed a keen interest in my methods of observation and inference. |
| |
| "For four years I had seen nothing of him until one morning he walked |
| into my room in Montague Street. He had changed little, was dressed like |
| a young man of fashion--he was always a bit of a dandy--and preserved |
| the same quiet, suave manner which had formerly distinguished him. |
| |
| "'How has all gone with you Musgrave?' I asked, after we had cordially |
| shaken hands. |
| |
| "'You probably heard of my poor father's death,' said he; 'he was |
| carried off about two years ago. Since then I have of course had the |
| Hurlstone estates to manage, and as I am member for my district as well, |
| my life has been a busy one. But I understand, Holmes, that you are |
| turning to practical ends those powers with which you used to amaze us?' |
| |
| "'Yes,' said I, 'I have taken to living by my wits.' |
| |
| "'I am delighted to hear it, for your advice at present would be |
| exceedingly valuable to me. We have had some very strange doings at |
| Hurlstone, and the police have been able to throw no light upon the |
| matter. It is really the most extraordinary and inexplicable business.' |
| |
| "You can imagine with what eagerness I listened to him, Watson, for |
| the very chance for which I had been panting during all those months |
| of inaction seemed to have come within my reach. In my inmost heart I |
| believed that I could succeed where others failed, and now I had the |
| opportunity to test myself. |
| |
| "'Pray, let me have the details,' I cried. |
| |
| "Reginald Musgrave sat down opposite to me, and lit the cigarette which |
| I had pushed towards him. |
| |
| "'You must know,' said he, 'that though I am a bachelor, I have to keep |
| up a considerable staff of servants at Hurlstone, for it is a rambling |
| old place, and takes a good deal of looking after. I preserve, too, and |
| in the pheasant months I usually have a house-party, so that it would |
| not do to be short-handed. Altogether there are eight maids, the cook, |
| the butler, two footmen, and a boy. The garden and the stables of course |
| have a separate staff. |
| |
| "'Of these servants the one who had been longest in our service was |
| Brunton the butler. He was a young school-master out of place when he |
| was first taken up by my father, but he was a man of great energy and |
| character, and he soon became quite invaluable in the household. He was |
| a well-grown, handsome man, with a splendid forehead, and though he has |
| been with us for twenty years he cannot be more than forty now. With |
| his personal advantages and his extraordinary gifts--for he can speak |
| several languages and play nearly every musical instrument--it is |
| wonderful that he should have been satisfied so long in such a position, |
| but I suppose that he was comfortable, and lacked energy to make any |
| change. The butler of Hurlstone is always a thing that is remembered by |
| all who visit us. |
| |
| "'But this paragon has one fault. He is a bit of a Don Juan, and you can |
| imagine that for a man like him it is not a very difficult part to play |
| in a quiet country district. When he was married it was all right, but |
| since he has been a widower we have had no end of trouble with him. A |
| few months ago we were in hopes that he was about to settle down again |
| for he became engaged to Rachel Howells, our second house-maid; but he |
| has thrown her over since then and taken up with Janet Tregellis, the |
| daughter of the head game-keeper. Rachel--who is a very good girl, but |
| of an excitable Welsh temperament--had a sharp touch of brain-fever, |
| and goes about the house now--or did until yesterday--like a black-eyed |
| shadow of her former self. That was our first drama at Hurlstone; but a |
| second one came to drive it from our minds, and it was prefaced by the |
| disgrace and dismissal of butler Brunton. |
| |
| "'This was how it came about. I have said that the man was intelligent, |
| and this very intelligence has caused his ruin, for it seems to have |
| led to an insatiable curiosity about things which did not in the least |
| concern him. I had no idea of the lengths to which this would carry him, |
| until the merest accident opened my eyes to it. |
| |
| "'I have said that the house is a rambling one. One day last week--on |
| Thursday night, to be more exact--I found that I could not sleep, |
| having foolishly taken a cup of strong café noir after my dinner. After |
| struggling against it until two in the morning, I felt that it was quite |
| hopeless, so I rose and lit the candle with the intention of continuing |
| a novel which I was reading. The book, however, had been left in the |
| billiard-room, so I pulled on my dressing-gown and started off to get |
| it. |
| |
| "'In order to reach the billiard-room I had to descend a flight of |
| stairs and then to cross the head of a passage which led to the library |
| and the gun-room. You can imagine my surprise when, as I looked down |
| this corridor, I saw a glimmer of light coming from the open door of the |
| library. I had myself extinguished the lamp and closed the door before |
| coming to bed. Naturally my first thought was of burglars. The corridors |
| at Hurlstone have their walls largely decorated with trophies of old |
| weapons. From one of these I picked a battle-axe, and then, leaving my |
| candle behind me, I crept on tiptoe down the passage and peeped in at |
| the open door. |
| |
| "'Brunton, the butler, was in the library. He was sitting, fully |
| dressed, in an easy-chair, with a slip of paper which looked like a |
| map upon his knee, and his forehead sunk forward upon his hand in deep |
| thought. I stood dumb with astonishment, watching him from the darkness. |
| A small taper on the edge of the table shed a feeble light which |
| sufficed to show me that he was fully dressed. Suddenly, as I looked, |
| he rose from his chair, and walking over to a bureau at the side, he |
| unlocked it and drew out one of the drawers. From this he took a paper, |
| and returning to his seat he flattened it out beside the taper on the |
| edge of the table, and began to study it with minute attention. My |
| indignation at this calm examination of our family documents overcame |
| me so far that I took a step forward, and Brunton, looking up, saw me |
| standing in the doorway. He sprang to his feet, his face turned livid |
| with fear, and he thrust into his breast the chart-like paper which he |
| had been originally studying. |
| |
| "'"So!" said I. "This is how you repay the trust which we have reposed |
| in you. You will leave my service to-morrow." |
| |
| "'He bowed with the look of a man who is utterly crushed, and slunk past |
| me without a word. The taper was still on the table, and by its light |
| I glanced to see what the paper was which Brunton had taken from the |
| bureau. To my surprise it was nothing of any importance at all, |
| but simply a copy of the questions and answers in the singular old |
| observance called the Musgrave Ritual. It is a sort of ceremony peculiar |
| to our family, which each Musgrave for centuries past has gone through |
| on his coming of age--a thing of private interest, and perhaps of some |
| little importance to the archaeologist, like our own blazonings and |
| charges, but of no practical use whatever.' |
| |
| "'We had better come back to the paper afterwards,' said I. |
| |
| "'If you think it really necessary,' he answered, with some hesitation. |
| 'To continue my statement, however: I relocked the bureau, using the key |
| which Brunton had left, and I had turned to go when I was surprised to |
| find that the butler had returned, and was standing before me. |
| |
| "'"Mr. Musgrave, sir," he cried, in a voice which was hoarse with |
| emotion, "I can't bear disgrace, sir. I've always been proud above my |
| station in life, and disgrace would kill me. My blood will be on your |
| head, sir--it will, indeed--if you drive me to despair. If you cannot |
| keep me after what has passed, then for God's sake let me give you |
| notice and leave in a month, as if of my own free will. I could stand |
| that, Mr. Musgrave, but not to be cast out before all the folk that I |
| know so well." |
| |
| "'"You don't deserve much consideration, Brunton," I answered. "Your |
| conduct has been most infamous. However, as you have been a long time in |
| the family, I have no wish to bring public disgrace upon you. A month, |
| however is too long. Take yourself away in a week, and give what reason |
| you like for going." |
| |
| "'"Only a week, sir?" he cried, in a despairing voice. "A fortnight--say |
| at least a fortnight!" |
| |
| "'"A week," I repeated, "and you may consider yourself to have been very |
| leniently dealt with." |
| |
| "'He crept away, his face sunk upon his breast, like a broken man, while |
| I put out the light and returned to my room. |
| |
| |
| "'"For two days after this Brunton was most assiduous in his attention |
| to his duties. I made no allusion to what had passed, and waited with |
| some curiosity to see how he would cover his disgrace. On the third |
| morning, however he did not appear, as was his custom, after breakfast |
| to receive my instructions for the day. As I left the dining-room I |
| happened to meet Rachel Howells, the maid. I have told you that she had |
| only recently recovered from an illness, and was looking so wretchedly |
| pale and wan that I remonstrated with her for being at work. |
| |
| "'"You should be in bed," I said. "Come back to your duties when you are |
| stronger." |
| |
| "'She looked at me with so strange an expression that I began to suspect |
| that her brain was affected. |
| |
| "'"I am strong enough, Mr. Musgrave," said she. |
| |
| "'"We will see what the doctor says," I answered. "You must stop work |
| now, and when you go downstairs just say that I wish to see Brunton." |
| |
| "'"The butler is gone," said she. |
| |
| "'"Gone! Gone where?" |
| |
| "'"He is gone. No one has seen him. He is not in his room. Oh, yes, he |
| is gone, he is gone!" She fell back against the wall with shriek after |
| shriek of laughter, while I, horrified at this sudden hysterical attack, |
| rushed to the bell to summon help. The girl was taken to her room, still |
| screaming and sobbing, while I made inquiries about Brunton. There was |
| no doubt about it that he had disappeared. His bed had not been slept |
| in, he had been seen by no one since he had retired to his room the |
| night before, and yet it was difficult to see how he could have left |
| the house, as both windows and doors were found to be fastened in the |
| morning. His clothes, his watch, and even his money were in his room, |
| but the black suit which he usually wore was missing. His slippers, |
| too, were gone, but his boots were left behind. Where then could butler |
| Brunton have gone in the night, and what could have become of him now? |
| |
| "'Of course we searched the house from cellar to garret, but there was |
| no trace of him. It is, as I have said, a labyrinth of an old house, |
| especially the original wing, which is now practically uninhabited; but |
| we ransacked every room and cellar without discovering the least sign |
| of the missing man. It was incredible to me that he could have gone away |
| leaving all his property behind him, and yet where could he be? I called |
| in the local police, but without success. Rain had fallen on the night |
| before and we examined the lawn and the paths all round the house, but |
| in vain. Matters were in this state, when a new development quite drew |
| our attention away from the original mystery. |
| |
| "'For two days Rachel Howells had been so ill, sometimes delirious, |
| sometimes hysterical, that a nurse had been employed to sit up with her |
| at night. On the third night after Brunton's disappearance, the nurse, |
| finding her patient sleeping nicely, had dropped into a nap in the |
| arm-chair, when she woke in the early morning to find the bed empty, the |
| window open, and no signs of the invalid. I was instantly aroused, and, |
| with the two footmen, started off at once in search of the missing girl. |
| It was not difficult to tell the direction which she had taken, for, |
| starting from under her window, we could follow her footmarks easily |
| across the lawn to the edge of the mere, where they vanished close to |
| the gravel path which leads out of the grounds. The lake there is eight |
| feet deep, and you can imagine our feelings when we saw that the trail |
| of the poor demented girl came to an end at the edge of it. |
| |
| "'Of course, we had the drags at once, and set to work to recover the |
| remains, but no trace of the body could we find. On the other hand, we |
| brought to the surface an object of a most unexpected kind. It was a |
| linen bag which contained within it a mass of old rusted and discolored |
| metal and several dull-colored pieces of pebble or glass. This strange |
| find was all that we could get from the mere, and, although we made |
| every possible search and inquiry yesterday, we know nothing of the fate |
| either of Rachel Howells or of Richard Brunton. The county police are at |
| their wits' end, and I have come up to you as a last resource.' |
| |
| "You can imagine, Watson, with what eagerness I listened to this |
| extraordinary sequence of events, and endeavored to piece them together, |
| and to devise some common thread upon which they might all hang. The |
| butler was gone. The maid was gone. The maid had loved the butler, but |
| had afterwards had cause to hate him. She was of Welsh blood, fiery |
| and passionate. She had been terribly excited immediately after his |
| disappearance. She had flung into the lake a bag containing some |
| curious contents. These were all factors which had to be taken into |
| consideration, and yet none of them got quite to the heart of the |
| matter. What was the starting-point of this chain of events? There lay |
| the end of this tangled line. |
| |
| "'I must see that paper, Musgrave,' said I, 'which this butler of your |
| thought it worth his while to consult, even at the risk of the loss of |
| his place.' |
| |
| "'It is rather an absurd business, this ritual of ours,' he answered. |
| 'But it has at least the saving grace of antiquity to excuse it. I have |
| a copy of the questions and answers here if you care to run your eye |
| over them.' |
| |
| "He handed me the very paper which I have here, Watson, and this is the |
| strange catechism to which each Musgrave had to submit when he came to |
| man's estate. I will read you the questions and answers as they stand. |
| |
| "'Whose was it?' |
| |
| "'His who is gone.' |
| |
| "'Who shall have it?' |
| |
| "'He who will come.' |
| |
| "'Where was the sun?' |
| |
| "'Over the oak.' |
| |
| "'Where was the shadow?' |
| |
| "'Under the elm.' |
| |
| "How was it stepped?' |
| |
| "'North by ten and by ten, east by five and by five, south by two and by |
| two, west by one and by one, and so under.' |
| |
| "'What shall we give for it?' |
| |
| "'All that is ours.' |
| |
| "'Why should we give it?' |
| |
| "'For the sake of the trust.' |
| |
| "'The original has no date, but is in the spelling of the middle of the |
| seventeenth century,' remarked Musgrave. 'I am afraid, however, that it |
| can be of little help to you in solving this mystery.' |
| |
| "'At least,' said I, 'it gives us another mystery, and one which is even |
| more interesting than the first. It may be that the solution of the one |
| may prove to be the solution of the other. You will excuse me, Musgrave, |
| if I say that your butler appears to me to have been a very clever man, |
| and to have had a clearer insight than ten generations of his masters.' |
| |
| "'I hardly follow you,' said Musgrave. 'The paper seems to me to be of |
| no practical importance.' |
| |
| "'But to me it seems immensely practical, and I fancy that Brunton took |
| the same view. He had probably seen it before that night on which you |
| caught him.' |
| |
| "'It is very possible. We took no pains to hide it.' |
| |
| "'He simply wished, I should imagine, to refresh his memory upon that |
| last occasion. He had, as I understand, some sort of map or chart which |
| he was comparing with the manuscript, and which he thrust into his |
| pocket when you appeared.' |
| |
| "'That is true. But what could he have to do with this old family custom |
| of ours, and what does this rigmarole mean?' |
| |
| "'I don't think that we should have much difficulty in determining |
| that,' said I; 'with your permission we will take the first train down |
| to Sussex, and go a little more deeply into the matter upon the spot.' |
| |
| |
| "The same afternoon saw us both at Hurlstone. Possibly you have seen |
| pictures and read descriptions of the famous old building, so I will |
| confine my account of it to saying that it is built in the shape of |
| an L, the long arm being the more modern portion, and the shorter the |
| ancient nucleus, from which the other had developed. Over the low, |
| heavily-lintelled door, in the centre of this old part, is chiseled the |
| date, 1607, but experts are agreed that the beams and stone-work are |
| really much older than this. The enormously thick walls and tiny windows |
| of this part had in the last century driven the family into building the |
| new wing, and the old one was used now as a store-house and a cellar, |
| when it was used at all. A splendid park with fine old timber surrounds |
| the house, and the lake, to which my client had referred, lay close to |
| the avenue, about two hundred yards from the building. |
| |
| "I was already firmly convinced, Watson, that there were not three |
| separate mysteries here, but one only, and that if I could read the |
| Musgrave Ritual aright I should hold in my hand the clue which would |
| lead me to the truth concerning both the butler Brunton and the maid |
| Howells. To that then I turned all my energies. Why should this servant |
| be so anxious to master this old formula? Evidently because he saw |
| something in it which had escaped all those generations of country |
| squires, and from which he expected some personal advantage. What was it |
| then, and how had it affected his fate? |
| |
| "It was perfectly obvious to me, on reading the ritual, that the |
| measurements must refer to some spot to which the rest of the document |
| alluded, and that if we could find that spot, we should be in a fair way |
| towards finding what the secret was which the old Musgraves had thought |
| it necessary to embalm in so curious a fashion. There were two guides |
| given us to start with, an oak and an elm. As to the oak there could be |
| no question at all. Right in front of the house, upon the left-hand |
| side of the drive, there stood a patriarch among oaks, one of the most |
| magnificent trees that I have ever seen. |
| |
| "'That was there when your ritual was drawn up,' said I, as we drove |
| past it. |
| |
| "'It was there at the Norman Conquest in all probability,' he answered. |
| 'It has a girth of twenty-three feet.' |
| |
| "'Have you any old elms?' I asked. |
| |
| "'There used to be a very old one over yonder but it was struck by |
| lightning ten years ago, and we cut down the stump.' |
| |
| "'You can see where it used to be?' |
| |
| "'Oh, yes.' |
| |
| "'There are no other elms?' |
| |
| "'No old ones, but plenty of beeches.' |
| |
| "'I should like to see where it grew.' |
| |
| "We had driven up in a dog-cart, and my client led me away at once, |
| without our entering the house, to the scar on the lawn where the |
| elm had stood. It was nearly midway between the oak and the house. My |
| investigation seemed to be progressing. |
| |
| "'I suppose it is impossible to find out how high the elm was?' I asked. |
| |
| "'I can give you it at once. It was sixty-four feet.' |
| |
| "'How do you come to know it?' I asked, in surprise. |
| |
| "'When my old tutor used to give me an exercise in trigonometry, it |
| always took the shape of measuring heights. When I was a lad I worked |
| out every tree and building in the estate.' |
| |
| "This was an unexpected piece of luck. My data were coming more quickly |
| than I could have reasonably hoped. |
| |
| "'Tell me,' I asked, 'did your butler ever ask you such a question?' |
| |
| "Reginald Musgrave looked at me in astonishment. 'Now that you call it |
| to my mind,' he answered, 'Brunton did ask me about the height of the |
| tree some months ago, in connection with some little argument with the |
| groom.' |
| |
| "This was excellent news, Watson, for it showed me that I was on the |
| right road. I looked up at the sun. It was low in the heavens, and I |
| calculated that in less than an hour it would lie just above the topmost |
| branches of the old oak. One condition mentioned in the Ritual would |
| then be fulfilled. And the shadow of the elm must mean the farther end |
| of the shadow, otherwise the trunk would have been chosen as the guide. |
| I had, then, to find where the far end of the shadow would fall when the |
| sun was just clear of the oak." |
| |
| "That must have been difficult, Holmes, when the elm was no longer |
| there." |
| |
| "Well, at least I knew that if Brunton could do it, I could also. |
| Besides, there was no real difficulty. I went with Musgrave to his study |
| and whittled myself this peg, to which I tied this long string with a |
| knot at each yard. Then I took two lengths of a fishing-rod, which came |
| to just six feet, and I went back with my client to where the elm had |
| been. The sun was just grazing the top of the oak. I fastened the rod |
| on end, marked out the direction of the shadow, and measured it. It was |
| nine feet in length. |
| |
| "Of course the calculation now was a simple one. If a rod of six feet |
| threw a shadow of nine, a tree of sixty-four feet would throw one of |
| ninety-six, and the line of the one would of course be the line of the |
| other. I measured out the distance, which brought me almost to the |
| wall of the house, and I thrust a peg into the spot. You can imagine |
| my exultation, Watson, when within two inches of my peg I saw a conical |
| depression in the ground. I knew that it was the mark made by Brunton in |
| his measurements, and that I was still upon his trail. |
| |
| "From this starting-point I proceeded to step, having first taken the |
| cardinal points by my pocket-compass. Ten steps with each foot took me |
| along parallel with the wall of the house, and again I marked my spot |
| with a peg. Then I carefully paced off five to the east and two to the |
| south. It brought me to the very threshold of the old door. Two steps |
| to the west meant now that I was to go two paces down the stone-flagged |
| passage, and this was the place indicated by the Ritual. |
| |
| "Never have I felt such a cold chill of disappointment, Watson. For a |
| moment is seemed to me that there must be some radical mistake in my |
| calculations. The setting sun shone full upon the passage floor, and I |
| could see that the old, foot-worn gray stones with which it was paved |
| were firmly cemented together, and had certainly not been moved for many |
| a long year. Brunton had not been at work here. I tapped upon the floor, |
| but it sounded the same all over, and there was no sign of any crack |
| or crevice. But, fortunately, Musgrave, who had begun to appreciate the |
| meaning of my proceedings, and who was now as excited as myself, took |
| out his manuscript to check my calculation. |
| |
| "'And under,' he cried. 'You have omitted the "and under."' |
| |
| "I had thought that it meant that we were to dig, but now, of course, |
| I saw at once that I was wrong. 'There is a cellar under this then?' I |
| cried. |
| |
| "'Yes, and as old as the house. Down here, through this door.' |
| |
| "We went down a winding stone stair, and my companion, striking a match, |
| lit a large lantern which stood on a barrel in the corner. In an instant |
| it was obvious that we had at last come upon the true place, and that we |
| had not been the only people to visit the spot recently. |
| |
| "It had been used for the storage of wood, but the billets, which had |
| evidently been littered over the floor, were now piled at the sides, so |
| as to leave a clear space in the middle. In this space lay a large and |
| heavy flagstone with a rusted iron ring in the centre to which a thick |
| shepherd's-check muffler was attached. |
| |
| "'By Jove!' cried my client. 'That's Brunton's muffler. I have seen it |
| on him, and could swear to it. What has the villain been doing here?' |
| |
| "At my suggestion a couple of the county police were summoned to be |
| present, and I then endeavored to raise the stone by pulling on the |
| cravat. I could only move it slightly, and it was with the aid of one |
| of the constables that I succeeded at last in carrying it to one side. |
| A black hole yawned beneath into which we all peered, while Musgrave, |
| kneeling at the side, pushed down the lantern. |
| |
| "A small chamber about seven feet deep and four feet square lay open to |
| us. At one side of this was a squat, brass-bound wooden box, the lid of |
| which was hinged upwards, with this curious old-fashioned key projecting |
| from the lock. It was furred outside by a thick layer of dust, and damp |
| and worms had eaten through the wood, so that a crop of livid fungi |
| was growing on the inside of it. Several discs of metal, old coins |
| apparently, such as I hold here, were scattered over the bottom of the |
| box, but it contained nothing else. |
| |
| "At the moment, however, we had no thought for the old chest, for our |
| eyes were riveted upon that which crouched beside it. It was the figure |
| of a man, clad in a suit of black, who squatted down upon his hams with |
| his forehead sunk upon the edge of the box and his two arms thrown out |
| on each side of it. The attitude had drawn all the stagnant blood to |
| the face, and no man could have recognized that distorted liver-colored |
| countenance; but his height, his dress, and his hair were all sufficient |
| to show my client, when we had drawn the body up, that it was indeed his |
| missing butler. He had been dead some days, but there was no wound or |
| bruise upon his person to show how he had met his dreadful end. When |
| his body had been carried from the cellar we found ourselves still |
| confronted with a problem which was almost as formidable as that with |
| which we had started. |
| |
| "I confess that so far, Watson, I had been disappointed in my |
| investigation. I had reckoned upon solving the matter when once I had |
| found the place referred to in the Ritual; but now I was there, and was |
| apparently as far as ever from knowing what it was which the family had |
| concealed with such elaborate precautions. It is true that I had thrown |
| a light upon the fate of Brunton, but now I had to ascertain how that |
| fate had come upon him, and what part had been played in the matter by |
| the woman who had disappeared. I sat down upon a keg in the corner and |
| thought the whole matter carefully over. |
| |
| "You know my methods in such cases, Watson. I put myself in the man's |
| place and, having first gauged his intelligence, I try to imagine how I |
| should myself have proceeded under the same circumstances. In this |
| case the matter was simplified by Brunton's intelligence being quite |
| first-rate, so that it was unnecessary to make any allowance for the |
| personal equation, as the astronomers have dubbed it. He knew that |
| something valuable was concealed. He had spotted the place. He found |
| that the stone which covered it was just too heavy for a man to move |
| unaided. What would he do next? He could not get help from outside, even |
| if he had some one whom he could trust, without the unbarring of doors |
| and considerable risk of detection. It was better, if he could, to have |
| his helpmate inside the house. But whom could he ask? This girl had been |
| devoted to him. A man always finds it hard to realize that he may have |
| finally lost a woman's love, however badly he may have treated her. He |
| would try by a few attentions to make his peace with the girl Howells, |
| and then would engage her as his accomplice. Together they would come at |
| night to the cellar, and their united force would suffice to raise the |
| stone. So far I could follow their actions as if I had actually seen |
| them. |
| |
| "But for two of them, and one a woman, it must have been heavy work the |
| raising of that stone. A burly Sussex policeman and I had found it no |
| light job. What would they do to assist them? Probably what I should |
| have done myself. I rose and examined carefully the different billets |
| of wood which were scattered round the floor. Almost at once I came |
| upon what I expected. One piece, about three feet in length, had a very |
| marked indentation at one end, while several were flattened at the sides |
| as if they had been compressed by some considerable weight. Evidently, |
| as they had dragged the stone up they had thrust the chunks of wood into |
| the chink, until at last, when the opening was large enough to crawl |
| through, they would hold it open by a billet placed lengthwise, which |
| might very well become indented at the lower end, since the whole weight |
| of the stone would press it down on to the edge of this other slab. So |
| far I was still on safe ground. |
| |
| "And now how was I to proceed to reconstruct this midnight drama? |
| Clearly, only one could fit into the hole, and that one was Brunton. The |
| girl must have waited above. Brunton then unlocked the box, handed up |
| the contents presumably--since they were not to be found--and then--and |
| then what happened? |
| |
| "What smouldering fire of vengeance had suddenly sprung into flame in |
| this passionate Celtic woman's soul when she saw the man who had wronged |
| her--wronged her, perhaps, far more than we suspected--in her power? |
| Was it a chance that the wood had slipped, and that the stone had shut |
| Brunton into what had become his sepulchre? Had she only been guilty of |
| silence as to his fate? Or had some sudden blow from her hand dashed the |
| support away and sent the slab crashing down into its place? Be that |
| as it might, I seemed to see that woman's figure still clutching at her |
| treasure trove and flying wildly up the winding stair, with her ears |
| ringing perhaps with the muffled screams from behind her and with the |
| drumming of frenzied hands against the slab of stone which was choking |
| her faithless lover's life out. |
| |
| "Here was the secret of her blanched face, her shaken nerves, her peals |
| of hysterical laughter on the next morning. But what had been in the |
| box? What had she done with that? Of course, it must have been the old |
| metal and pebbles which my client had dragged from the mere. She had |
| thrown them in there at the first opportunity to remove the last trace |
| of her crime. |
| |
| "For twenty minutes I had sat motionless, thinking the matter out. |
| Musgrave still stood with a very pale face, swinging his lantern and |
| peering down into the hole. |
| |
| "'These are coins of Charles the First,' said he, holding out the few |
| which had been in the box; 'you see we were right in fixing our date for |
| the Ritual.' |
| |
| "'We may find something else of Charles the First,' I cried, as the |
| probable meaning of the first two questions of the Ritual broke suddenly |
| upon me. 'Let me see the contents of the bag which you fished from the |
| mere.' |
| |
| |
| "We ascended to his study, and he laid the debris before me. I could |
| understand his regarding it as of small importance when I looked at it, |
| for the metal was almost black and the stones lustreless and dull. I |
| rubbed one of them on my sleeve, however, and it glowed afterwards like |
| a spark in the dark hollow of my hand. The metal work was in the form |
| of a double ring, but it had been bent and twisted out of its original |
| shape. |
| |
| "'You must bear in mind,' said I, 'that the royal party made head in |
| England even after the death of the king, and that when they at last |
| fled they probably left many of their most precious possessions buried |
| behind them, with the intention of returning for them in more peaceful |
| times.' |
| |
| "'My ancestor, Sir Ralph Musgrave, was a prominent Cavalier and the |
| right-hand man of Charles the Second in his wanderings,' said my friend. |
| |
| "'Ah, indeed!' I answered. 'Well now, I think that really should give us |
| the last link that we wanted. I must congratulate you on coming into |
| the possession, though in rather a tragic manner of a relic which is of |
| great intrinsic value, but of even greater importance as an historical |
| curiosity.' |
| |
| "'What is it, then?' he gasped in astonishment. |
| |
| "'It is nothing less than the ancient crown of the kings of England.' |
| |
| "'The crown!' |
| |
| "'Precisely. Consider what the Ritual says: How does it run? "Whose was |
| it?" "His who is gone." That was after the execution of Charles. Then, |
| "Who shall have it?" "He who will come." That was Charles the Second, |
| whose advent was already foreseen. There can, I think, be no doubt that |
| this battered and shapeless diadem once encircled the brows of the royal |
| Stuarts.' |
| |
| "'And how came it in the pond?' |
| |
| "'Ah, that is a question that will take some time to answer.' And with |
| that I sketched out to him the whole long chain of surmise and of proof |
| which I had constructed. The twilight had closed in and the moon was |
| shining brightly in the sky before my narrative was finished. |
| |
| "'And how was it then that Charles did not get his crown when he |
| returned?' asked Musgrave, pushing back the relic into its linen bag. |
| |
| "'Ah, there you lay your finger upon the one point which we shall |
| probably never be able to clear up. It is likely that the Musgrave who |
| held the secret died in the interval, and by some oversight left this |
| guide to his descendant without explaining the meaning of it. From that |
| day to this it has been handed down from father to son, until at last |
| it came within reach of a man who tore its secret out of it and lost his |
| life in the venture.' |
| |
| |
| "And that's the story of the Musgrave Ritual, Watson. They have the |
| crown down at Hurlstone--though they had some legal bother and a |
| considerable sum to pay before they were allowed to retain it. I am sure |
| that if you mentioned my name they would be happy to show it to you. Of |
| the woman nothing was ever heard, and the probability is that she got |
| away out of England and carried herself and the memory of her crime to |
| some land beyond the seas." |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure VI. The Reigate Puzzle |
| |
| |
| It was some time before the health of my friend Mr. Sherlock Holmes |
| recovered from the strain caused by his immense exertions in the spring |
| of '87. The whole question of the Netherland-Sumatra Company and of the |
| colossal schemes of Baron Maupertuis are too recent in the minds of the |
| public, and are too intimately concerned with politics and finance to be |
| fitting subjects for this series of sketches. They led, however, in an |
| indirect fashion to a singular and complex problem which gave my friend |
| an opportunity of demonstrating the value of a fresh weapon among the |
| many with which he waged his life-long battle against crime. |
| |
| On referring to my notes I see that it was upon the 14th of April that |
| I received a telegram from Lyons which informed me that Holmes was |
| lying ill in the Hotel Dulong. Within twenty-four hours I was in his |
| sick-room, and was relieved to find that there was nothing formidable in |
| his symptoms. Even his iron constitution, however, had broken down |
| under the strain of an investigation which had extended over two months, |
| during which period he had never worked less than fifteen hours a day, |
| and had more than once, as he assured me, kept to his task for five days |
| at a stretch. Even the triumphant issue of his labors could not save him |
| from reaction after so terrible an exertion, and at a time when Europe |
| was ringing with his name and when his room was literally ankle-deep |
| with congratulatory telegrams I found him a prey to the blackest |
| depression. Even the knowledge that he had succeeded where the police of |
| three countries had failed, and that he had outmanoeuvred at every point |
| the most accomplished swindler in Europe, was insufficient to rouse him |
| from his nervous prostration. |
| |
| Three days later we were back in Baker Street together; but it was |
| evident that my friend would be much the better for a change, and the |
| thought of a week of spring time in the country was full of attractions |
| to me also. My old friend, Colonel Hayter, who had come under my |
| professional care in Afghanistan, had now taken a house near Reigate in |
| Surrey, and had frequently asked me to come down to him upon a visit. On |
| the last occasion he had remarked that if my friend would only come |
| with me he would be glad to extend his hospitality to him also. A little |
| diplomacy was needed, but when Holmes understood that the establishment |
| was a bachelor one, and that he would be allowed the fullest freedom, |
| he fell in with my plans and a week after our return from Lyons we were |
| under the Colonel's roof. Hayter was a fine old soldier who had seen |
| much of the world, and he soon found, as I had expected, that Holmes and |
| he had much in common. |
| |
| On the evening of our arrival we were sitting in the Colonel's gun-room |
| after dinner, Holmes stretched upon the sofa, while Hayter and I looked |
| over his little armory of Eastern weapons. |
| |
| "By the way," said he suddenly, "I think I'll take one of these pistols |
| upstairs with me in case we have an alarm." |
| |
| "An alarm!" said I. |
| |
| "Yes, we've had a scare in this part lately. Old Acton, who is one of |
| our county magnates, had his house broken into last Monday. No great |
| damage done, but the fellows are still at large." |
| |
| "No clue?" asked Holmes, cocking his eye at the Colonel. |
| |
| "None as yet. But the affair is a petty one, one of our little country |
| crimes, which must seem too small for your attention, Mr. Holmes, after |
| this great international affair." |
| |
| Holmes waved away the compliment, though his smile showed that it had |
| pleased him. |
| |
| "Was there any feature of interest?" |
| |
| "I fancy not. The thieves ransacked the library and got very little for |
| their pains. The whole place was turned upside down, drawers burst open, |
| and presses ransacked, with the result that an odd volume of Pope's |
| 'Homer,' two plated candlesticks, an ivory letter-weight, a small oak |
| barometer, and a ball of twine are all that have vanished." |
| |
| "What an extraordinary assortment!" I exclaimed. |
| |
| "Oh, the fellows evidently grabbed hold of everything they could get." |
| |
| Holmes grunted from the sofa. |
| |
| "The county police ought to make something of that," said he; "why, it |
| is surely obvious that--" |
| |
| But I held up a warning finger. |
| |
| "You are here for a rest, my dear fellow. For Heaven's sake don't get |
| started on a new problem when your nerves are all in shreds." |
| |
| Holmes shrugged his shoulders with a glance of comic resignation towards |
| the Colonel, and the talk drifted away into less dangerous channels. |
| |
| It was destined, however, that all my professional caution should be |
| wasted, for next morning the problem obtruded itself upon us in such a |
| way that it was impossible to ignore it, and our country visit took a |
| turn which neither of us could have anticipated. We were at breakfast |
| when the Colonel's butler rushed in with all his propriety shaken out of |
| him. |
| |
| "Have you heard the news, sir?" he gasped. "At the Cunningham's sir!" |
| |
| "Burglary!" cried the Colonel, with his coffee-cup in mid-air. |
| |
| "Murder!" |
| |
| The Colonel whistled. "By Jove!" said he. "Who's killed, then? The J.P. |
| or his son?" |
| |
| "Neither, sir. It was William the coachman. Shot through the heart, sir, |
| and never spoke again." |
| |
| "Who shot him, then?" |
| |
| "The burglar, sir. He was off like a shot and got clean away. He'd just |
| broke in at the pantry window when William came on him and met his end |
| in saving his master's property." |
| |
| "What time?" |
| |
| "It was last night, sir, somewhere about twelve." |
| |
| "Ah, then, we'll step over afterwards," said the Colonel, coolly |
| settling down to his breakfast again. "It's a baddish business," he |
| added when the butler had gone; "he's our leading man about here, is old |
| Cunningham, and a very decent fellow too. He'll be cut up over this, for |
| the man has been in his service for years and was a good servant. It's |
| evidently the same villains who broke into Acton's." |
| |
| "And stole that very singular collection," said Holmes, thoughtfully. |
| |
| "Precisely." |
| |
| "Hum! It may prove the simplest matter in the world, but all the same |
| at first glance this is just a little curious, is it not? A gang of |
| burglars acting in the country might be expected to vary the scene of |
| their operations, and not to crack two cribs in the same district within |
| a few days. When you spoke last night of taking precautions I remember |
| that it passed through my mind that this was probably the last parish |
| in England to which the thief or thieves would be likely to turn their |
| attention--which shows that I have still much to learn." |
| |
| "I fancy it's some local practitioner," said the Colonel. "In that case, |
| of course, Acton's and Cunningham's are just the places he would go for, |
| since they are far the largest about here." |
| |
| "And richest?" |
| |
| "Well, they ought to be, but they've had a lawsuit for some years which |
| has sucked the blood out of both of them, I fancy. Old Acton has some |
| claim on half Cunningham's estate, and the lawyers have been at it with |
| both hands." |
| |
| "If it's a local villain there should not be much difficulty in running |
| him down," said Holmes with a yawn. "All right, Watson, I don't intend |
| to meddle." |
| |
| "Inspector Forrester, sir," said the butler, throwing open the door. |
| |
| The official, a smart, keen-faced young fellow, stepped into the room. |
| "Good-morning, Colonel," said he; "I hope I don't intrude, but we hear |
| that Mr. Holmes of Baker Street is here." |
| |
| The Colonel waved his hand towards my friend, and the Inspector bowed. |
| |
| "We thought that perhaps you would care to step across, Mr. Holmes." |
| |
| "The fates are against you, Watson," said he, laughing. "We were |
| chatting about the matter when you came in, Inspector. Perhaps you |
| can let us have a few details." As he leaned back in his chair in the |
| familiar attitude I knew that the case was hopeless. |
| |
| "We had no clue in the Acton affair. But here we have plenty to go on, |
| and there's no doubt it is the same party in each case. The man was |
| seen." |
| |
| "Ah!" |
| |
| "Yes, sir. But he was off like a deer after the shot that killed poor |
| William Kirwan was fired. Mr. Cunningham saw him from the bedroom |
| window, and Mr. Alec Cunningham saw him from the back passage. It was |
| quarter to twelve when the alarm broke out. Mr. Cunningham had just got |
| into bed, and Mr. Alec was smoking a pipe in his dressing-gown. They |
| both heard William the coachman calling for help, and Mr. Alec ran down |
| to see what was the matter. The back door was open, and as he came to |
| the foot of the stairs he saw two men wrestling together outside. One of |
| them fired a shot, the other dropped, and the murderer rushed across the |
| garden and over the hedge. Mr. Cunningham, looking out of his bedroom, |
| saw the fellow as he gained the road, but lost sight of him at once. Mr. |
| Alec stopped to see if he could help the dying man, and so the villain |
| got clean away. Beyond the fact that he was a middle-sized man and |
| dressed in some dark stuff, we have no personal clue; but we are making |
| energetic inquiries, and if he is a stranger we shall soon find him |
| out." |
| |
| "What was this William doing there? Did he say anything before he died?" |
| |
| "Not a word. He lives at the lodge with his mother, and as he was a |
| very faithful fellow we imagine that he walked up to the house with |
| the intention of seeing that all was right there. Of course this Acton |
| business has put every one on their guard. The robber must have just |
| burst open the door--the lock has been forced--when William came upon |
| him." |
| |
| "Did William say anything to his mother before going out?" |
| |
| "She is very old and deaf, and we can get no information from her. The |
| shock has made her half-witted, but I understand that she was never |
| very bright. There is one very important circumstance, however. Look at |
| this!" |
| |
| He took a small piece of torn paper from a note-book and spread it out |
| upon his knee. |
| |
| "This was found between the finger and thumb of the dead man. It appears |
| to be a fragment torn from a larger sheet. You will observe that the |
| hour mentioned upon it is the very time at which the poor fellow met his |
| fate. You see that his murderer might have torn the rest of the sheet |
| from him or he might have taken this fragment from the murderer. It |
| reads almost as though it were an appointment." |
| |
| Holmes took up the scrap of paper, a fac-simile of which is here |
| reproduced. |
| |
| d at quarter to twelve learn what maybe |
| |
| "Presuming that it is an appointment," continued the Inspector, "it is |
| of course a conceivable theory that this William Kirwan--though he had |
| the reputation of being an honest man, may have been in league with the |
| thief. He may have met him there, may even have helped him to break in |
| the door, and then they may have fallen out between themselves." |
| |
| "This writing is of extraordinary interest," said Holmes, who had been |
| examining it with intense concentration. "These are much deeper waters |
| than I had thought." He sank his head upon his hands, while the Inspector |
| smiled at the effect which his case had had upon the famous London |
| specialist. |
| |
| "Your last remark," said Holmes, presently, "as to the possibility of |
| there being an understanding between the burglar and the servant, and |
| this being a note of appointment from one to the other, is an ingenious |
| and not entirely impossible supposition. But this writing opens up--" He |
| sank his head into his hands again and remained for some minutes in the |
| deepest thought. When he raised his face again, I was surprised to see |
| that his cheek was tinged with color, and his eyes as bright as before |
| his illness. He sprang to his feet with all his old energy. |
| |
| "I'll tell you what," said he, "I should like to have a quiet little |
| glance into the details of this case. There is something in it which |
| fascinates me extremely. If you will permit me, Colonel, I will leave my |
| friend Watson and you, and I will step round with the Inspector to test |
| the truth of one or two little fancies of mine. I will be with you again |
| in half an hour." |
| |
| An hour and half had elapsed before the Inspector returned alone. |
| |
| "Mr. Holmes is walking up and down in the field outside," said he. "He |
| wants us all four to go up to the house together." |
| |
| "To Mr. Cunningham's?" |
| |
| "Yes, sir." |
| |
| "What for?" |
| |
| The Inspector shrugged his shoulders. "I don't quite know, sir. Between |
| ourselves, I think Mr. Holmes had not quite got over his illness yet. |
| He's been behaving very queerly, and he is very much excited." |
| |
| "I don't think you need alarm yourself," said I. "I have usually found |
| that there was method in his madness." |
| |
| "Some folks might say there was madness in his method," muttered the |
| Inspector. "But he's all on fire to start, Colonel, so we had best go |
| out if you are ready." |
| |
| We found Holmes pacing up and down in the field, his chin sunk upon his |
| breast, and his hands thrust into his trousers pockets. |
| |
| "The matter grows in interest," said he. "Watson, your country-trip has |
| been a distinct success. I have had a charming morning." |
| |
| "You have been up to the scene of the crime, I understand," said the |
| Colonel. |
| |
| "Yes; the Inspector and I have made quite a little reconnaissance |
| together." |
| |
| "Any success?" |
| |
| "Well, we have seen some very interesting things. I'll tell you what we |
| did as we walk. First of all, we saw the body of this unfortunate man. |
| He certainly died from a revolver wound as reported." |
| |
| "Had you doubted it, then?" |
| |
| "Oh, it is as well to test everything. Our inspection was not wasted. We |
| then had an interview with Mr. Cunningham and his son, who were able |
| to point out the exact spot where the murderer had broken through the |
| garden-hedge in his flight. That was of great interest." |
| |
| "Naturally." |
| |
| "Then we had a look at this poor fellow's mother. We could get no |
| information from her, however, as she is very old and feeble." |
| |
| "And what is the result of your investigations?" |
| |
| "The conviction that the crime is a very peculiar one. Perhaps our visit |
| now may do something to make it less obscure. I think that we are both |
| agreed, Inspector that the fragment of paper in the dead man's hand, |
| bearing, as it does, the very hour of his death written upon it, is of |
| extreme importance." |
| |
| "It should give a clue, Mr. Holmes." |
| |
| "It does give a clue. Whoever wrote that note was the man who brought |
| William Kirwan out of his bed at that hour. But where is the rest of |
| that sheet of paper?" |
| |
| "I examined the ground carefully in the hope of finding it," said the |
| Inspector. |
| |
| "It was torn out of the dead man's hand. Why was some one so anxious to |
| get possession of it? Because it incriminated him. And what would he do |
| with it? Thrust it into his pocket, most likely, never noticing that a |
| corner of it had been left in the grip of the corpse. If we could get |
| the rest of that sheet it is obvious that we should have gone a long way |
| towards solving the mystery." |
| |
| "Yes, but how can we get at the criminal's pocket before we catch the |
| criminal?" |
| |
| "Well, well, it was worth thinking over. Then there is another obvious |
| point. The note was sent to William. The man who wrote it could not have |
| taken it; otherwise, of course, he might have delivered his own message |
| by word of mouth. Who brought the note, then? Or did it come through the |
| post?" |
| |
| "I have made inquiries," said the Inspector. "William received a letter |
| by the afternoon post yesterday. The envelope was destroyed by him." |
| |
| "Excellent!" cried Holmes, clapping the Inspector on the back. "You've |
| seen the postman. It is a pleasure to work with you. Well, here is the |
| lodge, and if you will come up, Colonel, I will show you the scene of |
| the crime." |
| |
| We passed the pretty cottage where the murdered man had lived, and |
| walked up an oak-lined avenue to the fine old Queen Anne house, which |
| bears the date of Malplaquet upon the lintel of the door. Holmes and |
| the Inspector led us round it until we came to the side gate, which is |
| separated by a stretch of garden from the hedge which lines the road. A |
| constable was standing at the kitchen door. |
| |
| "Throw the door open, officer," said Holmes. "Now, it was on those |
| stairs that young Mr. Cunningham stood and saw the two men struggling |
| just where we are. Old Mr. Cunningham was at that window--the second on |
| the left--and he saw the fellow get away just to the left of that bush. |
| Then Mr. Alec ran out and knelt beside the wounded man. The ground is |
| very hard, you see, and there are no marks to guide us." As he spoke two |
| men came down the garden path, from round the angle of the house. The |
| one was an elderly man, with a strong, deep-lined, heavy-eyed face; the |
| other a dashing young fellow, whose bright, smiling expression and showy |
| dress were in strange contract with the business which had brought us |
| there. |
| |
| "Still at it, then?" said he to Holmes. "I thought you Londoners were |
| never at fault. You don't seem to be so very quick, after all." |
| |
| "Ah, you must give us a little time," said Holmes good-humoredly. |
| |
| "You'll want it," said young Alec Cunningham. "Why, I don't see that we |
| have any clue at all." |
| |
| "There's only one," answered the Inspector. "We thought that if we could |
| only find--Good heavens, Mr. Holmes! What is the matter?" |
| |
| My poor friend's face had suddenly assumed the most dreadful expression. |
| His eyes rolled upwards, his features writhed in agony, and with a |
| suppressed groan he dropped on his face upon the ground. Horrified |
| at the suddenness and severity of the attack, we carried him into the |
| kitchen, where he lay back in a large chair, and breathed heavily for |
| some minutes. Finally, with a shamefaced apology for his weakness, he |
| rose once more. |
| |
| "Watson would tell you that I have only just recovered from a severe |
| illness," he explained. "I am liable to these sudden nervous attacks." |
| |
| "Shall I send you home in my trap?" asked old Cunningham. |
| |
| "Well, since I am here, there is one point on which I should like to |
| feel sure. We can very easily verify it." |
| |
| "What was it?" |
| |
| "Well, it seems to me that it is just possible that the arrival of |
| this poor fellow William was not before, but after, the entrance of |
| the burglary into the house. You appear to take it for granted that, |
| although the door was forced, the robber never got in." |
| |
| "I fancy that is quite obvious," said Mr. Cunningham, gravely. "Why, my |
| son Alec had not yet gone to bed, and he would certainly have heard any |
| one moving about." |
| |
| "Where was he sitting?" |
| |
| "I was smoking in my dressing-room." |
| |
| "Which window is that?" |
| |
| "The last on the left next my father's." |
| |
| "Both of your lamps were lit, of course?" |
| |
| "Undoubtedly." |
| |
| "There are some very singular points here," said Holmes, smiling. "Is |
| it not extraordinary that a burglary--and a burglar who had had some |
| previous experience--should deliberately break into a house at a time |
| when he could see from the lights that two of the family were still |
| afoot?" |
| |
| "He must have been a cool hand." |
| |
| "Well, of course, if the case were not an odd one we should not have |
| been driven to ask you for an explanation," said young Mr. Alec. "But as |
| to your ideas that the man had robbed the house before William tackled |
| him, I think it a most absurd notion. Wouldn't we have found the place |
| disarranged, and missed the things which he had taken?" |
| |
| "It depends on what the things were," said Holmes. "You must remember |
| that we are dealing with a burglar who is a very peculiar fellow, and |
| who appears to work on lines of his own. Look, for example, at the |
| queer lot of things which he took from Acton's--what was it?--a ball of |
| string, a letter-weight, and I don't know what other odds and ends." |
| |
| "Well, we are quite in your hands, Mr. Holmes," said old Cunningham. |
| "Anything which you or the Inspector may suggest will most certainly be |
| done." |
| |
| "In the first place," said Holmes, "I should like you to offer a |
| reward--coming from yourself, for the officials may take a little time |
| before they would agree upon the sum, and these things cannot be done |
| too promptly. I have jotted down the form here, if you would not mind |
| signing it. Fifty pounds was quite enough, I thought." |
| |
| "I would willingly give five hundred," said the J.P., taking the slip |
| of paper and the pencil which Holmes handed to him. "This is not quite |
| correct, however," he added, glancing over the document. |
| |
| "I wrote it rather hurriedly." |
| |
| "You see you begin, 'Whereas, at about a quarter to one on Tuesday |
| morning an attempt was made,' and so on. It was at a quarter to twelve, |
| as a matter of fact." |
| |
| I was pained at the mistake, for I knew how keenly Holmes would feel any |
| slip of the kind. It was his specialty to be accurate as to fact, but |
| his recent illness had shaken him, and this one little incident was |
| enough to show me that he was still far from being himself. He was |
| obviously embarrassed for an instant, while the Inspector raised his |
| eyebrows, and Alec Cunningham burst into a laugh. The old gentleman |
| corrected the mistake, however, and handed the paper back to Holmes. |
| |
| "Get it printed as soon as possible," he said; "I think your idea is an |
| excellent one." |
| |
| Holmes put the slip of paper carefully away into his pocket-book. |
| |
| "And now," said he, "it really would be a good thing that we should all |
| go over the house together and make certain that this rather erratic |
| burglar did not, after all, carry anything away with him." |
| |
| Before entering, Holmes made an examination of the door which had been |
| forced. It was evident that a chisel or strong knife had been thrust |
| in, and the lock forced back with it. We could see the marks in the wood |
| where it had been pushed in. |
| |
| "You don't use bars, then?" he asked. |
| |
| "We have never found it necessary." |
| |
| "You don't keep a dog?" |
| |
| "Yes, but he is chained on the other side of the house." |
| |
| "When do the servants go to bed?" |
| |
| "About ten." |
| |
| "I understand that William was usually in bed also at that hour." |
| |
| "Yes." |
| |
| "It is singular that on this particular night he should have been up. |
| Now, I should be very glad if you would have the kindness to show us |
| over the house, Mr. Cunningham." |
| |
| A stone-flagged passage, with the kitchens branching away from it, led |
| by a wooden staircase directly to the first floor of the house. It came |
| out upon the landing opposite to a second more ornamental stair which |
| came up from the front hall. Out of this landing opened the drawing-room |
| and several bedrooms, including those of Mr. Cunningham and his son. |
| Holmes walked slowly, taking keen note of the architecture of the house. |
| I could tell from his expression that he was on a hot scent, and yet |
| I could not in the least imagine in what direction his inferences were |
| leading him. |
| |
| "My good sir," said Mr. Cunningham with some impatience, "this is surely |
| very unnecessary. That is my room at the end of the stairs, and my |
| son's is the one beyond it. I leave it to your judgment whether it was |
| possible for the thief to have come up here without disturbing us." |
| |
| "You must try round and get on a fresh scent, I fancy," said the son |
| with a rather malicious smile. |
| |
| "Still, I must ask you to humor me a little further. I should like, for |
| example, to see how far the windows of the bedrooms command the front. |
| This, I understand is your son's room"--he pushed open the door--"and |
| that, I presume, is the dressing-room in which he sat smoking when the |
| alarm was given. Where does the window of that look out to?" He stepped |
| across the bedroom, pushed open the door, and glanced round the other |
| chamber. |
| |
| "I hope that you are satisfied now?" said Mr. Cunningham, tartly. |
| |
| "Thank you, I think I have seen all that I wished." |
| |
| "Then if it is really necessary we can go into my room." |
| |
| "If it is not too much trouble." |
| |
| The J. P. shrugged his shoulders, and led the way into his own chamber, |
| which was a plainly furnished and commonplace room. As we moved across |
| it in the direction of the window, Holmes fell back until he and I were |
| the last of the group. Near the foot of the bed stood a dish of oranges |
| and a carafe of water. As we passed it Holmes, to my unutterable |
| astonishment, leaned over in front of me and deliberately knocked the |
| whole thing over. The glass smashed into a thousand pieces and the fruit |
| rolled about into every corner of the room. |
| |
| "You've done it now, Watson," said he, coolly. "A pretty mess you've |
| made of the carpet." |
| |
| I stooped in some confusion and began to pick up the fruit, |
| understanding for some reason my companion desired me to take the blame |
| upon myself. The others did the same, and set the table on its legs |
| again. |
| |
| "Hullo!" cried the Inspector, "where's he got to?" |
| |
| Holmes had disappeared. |
| |
| "Wait here an instant," said young Alec Cunningham. "The fellow is off |
| his head, in my opinion. Come with me, father, and see where he has got |
| to!" |
| |
| They rushed out of the room, leaving the Inspector, the Colonel, and me |
| staring at each other. |
| |
| "'Pon my word, I am inclined to agree with Master Alec," said the |
| official. "It may be the effect of this illness, but it seems to me |
| that--" |
| |
| His words were cut short by a sudden scream of "Help! Help! Murder!" |
| With a thrill I recognized the voice of that of my friend. I rushed |
| madly from the room on to the landing. The cries, which had sunk down |
| into a hoarse, inarticulate shouting, came from the room which we had |
| first visited. I dashed in, and on into the dressing-room beyond. The |
| two Cunninghams were bending over the prostrate figure of Sherlock |
| Holmes, the younger clutching his throat with both hands, while the |
| elder seemed to be twisting one of his wrists. In an instant the three |
| of us had torn them away from him, and Holmes staggered to his feet, |
| very pale and evidently greatly exhausted. |
| |
| "Arrest these men, Inspector," he gasped. |
| |
| "On what charge?" |
| |
| "That of murdering their coachman, William Kirwan." |
| |
| The Inspector stared about him in bewilderment. "Oh, come now, Mr. |
| Holmes," said he at last, "I'm sure you don't really mean to--" |
| |
| "Tut, man, look at their faces!" cried Holmes, curtly. |
| |
| Never certainly have I seen a plainer confession of guilt upon human |
| countenances. The older man seemed numbed and dazed with a heavy, sullen |
| expression upon his strongly-marked face. The son, on the other hand, |
| had dropped all that jaunty, dashing style which had characterized him, |
| and the ferocity of a dangerous wild beast gleamed in his dark eyes |
| and distorted his handsome features. The Inspector said nothing, but, |
| stepping to the door, he blew his whistle. Two of his constables came at |
| the call. |
| |
| "I have no alternative, Mr. Cunningham," said he. "I trust that this may |
| all prove to be an absurd mistake, but you can see that--Ah, would you? |
| Drop it!" He struck out with his hand, and a revolver which the younger |
| man was in the act of cocking clattered down upon the floor. |
| |
| "Keep that," said Holmes, quietly putting his foot upon it; "you will |
| find it useful at the trial. But this is what we really wanted." He held |
| up a little crumpled piece of paper. |
| |
| "The remainder of the sheet!" cried the Inspector. |
| |
| "Precisely." |
| |
| "And where was it?" |
| |
| "Where I was sure it must be. I'll make the whole matter clear to you |
| presently. I think, Colonel, that you and Watson might return now, and |
| I will be with you again in an hour at the furthest. The Inspector and I |
| must have a word with the prisoners, but you will certainly see me back |
| at luncheon time." |
| |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes was as good as his word, for about one o'clock he |
| rejoined us in the Colonel's smoking-room. He was accompanied by a |
| little elderly gentleman, who was introduced to me as the Mr. Acton |
| whose house had been the scene of the original burglary. |
| |
| "I wished Mr. Acton to be present while I demonstrated this small matter |
| to you," said Holmes, "for it is natural that he should take a keen |
| interest in the details. I am afraid, my dear Colonel, that you must |
| regret the hour that you took in such a stormy petrel as I am." |
| |
| "On the contrary," answered the Colonel, warmly, "I consider it the |
| greatest privilege to have been permitted to study your methods of |
| working. I confess that they quite surpass my expectations, and that I |
| am utterly unable to account for your result. I have not yet seen the |
| vestige of a clue." |
| |
| "I am afraid that my explanation may disillusion you but it has always |
| been my habit to hide none of my methods, either from my friend Watson |
| or from any one who might take an intelligent interest in them. But, |
| first, as I am rather shaken by the knocking about which I had in |
| the dressing-room, I think that I shall help myself to a dash of your |
| brandy, Colonel. My strength had been rather tried of late." |
| |
| "I trust that you had no more of those nervous attacks." |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes laughed heartily. "We will come to that in its turn," |
| said he. "I will lay an account of the case before you in its due order, |
| showing you the various points which guided me in my decision. Pray |
| interrupt me if there is any inference which is not perfectly clear to |
| you. |
| |
| "It is of the highest importance in the art of detection to be able |
| to recognize, out of a number of facts, which are incidental and which |
| vital. Otherwise your energy and attention must be dissipated instead of |
| being concentrated. Now, in this case there was not the slightest doubt |
| in my mind from the first that the key of the whole matter must be |
| looked for in the scrap of paper in the dead man's hand. |
| |
| "Before going into this, I would draw your attention to the fact that, |
| if Alec Cunningham's narrative was correct, and if the assailant, after |
| shooting William Kirwan, had instantly fled, then it obviously could not |
| be he who tore the paper from the dead man's hand. But if it was not he, |
| it must have been Alec Cunningham himself, for by the time that the old |
| man had descended several servants were upon the scene. The point is a |
| simple one, but the Inspector had overlooked it because he had started |
| with the supposition that these county magnates had had nothing to do |
| with the matter. Now, I make a point of never having any prejudices, |
| and of following docilely wherever fact may lead me, and so, in the |
| very first stage of the investigation, I found myself looking a little |
| askance at the part which had been played by Mr. Alec Cunningham. |
| |
| "And now I made a very careful examination of the corner of paper which |
| the Inspector had submitted to us. It was at once clear to me that it |
| formed part of a very remarkable document. Here it is. Do you not now |
| observe something very suggestive about it?" |
| |
| "It has a very irregular look," said the Colonel. |
| |
| "My dear sir," cried Holmes, "there cannot be the least doubt in the |
| world that it has been written by two persons doing alternate words. |
| When I draw your attention to the strong t's of 'at' and 'to', and ask |
| you to compare them with the weak ones of 'quarter' and 'twelve,' you |
| will instantly recognize the fact. A very brief analysis of these |
| four words would enable you to say with the utmost confidence that the |
| 'learn' and the 'maybe' are written in the stronger hand, and the 'what' |
| in the weaker." |
| |
| "By Jove, it's as clear as day!" cried the Colonel. "Why on earth should |
| two men write a letter in such a fashion?" |
| |
| "Obviously the business was a bad one, and one of the men who distrusted |
| the other was determined that, whatever was done, each should have an |
| equal hand in it. Now, of the two men, it is clear that the one who |
| wrote the 'at' and 'to' was the ringleader." |
| |
| "How do you get at that?" |
| |
| "We might deduce it from the mere character of the one hand as compared |
| with the other. But we have more assured reasons than that for supposing |
| it. If you examine this scrap with attention you will come to the |
| conclusion that the man with the stronger hand wrote all his words |
| first, leaving blanks for the other to fill up. These blanks were not |
| always sufficient, and you can see that the second man had a squeeze |
| to fit his 'quarter' in between the 'at' and the 'to,' showing that the |
| latter were already written. The man who wrote all his words first is |
| undoubtedly the man who planned the affair." |
| |
| "Excellent!" cried Mr. Acton. |
| |
| "But very superficial," said Holmes. "We come now, however, to a point |
| which is of importance. You may not be aware that the deduction of a |
| man's age from his writing is one which has brought to considerable |
| accuracy by experts. In normal cases one can place a man in his true |
| decade with tolerable confidence. I say normal cases, because ill-health |
| and physical weakness reproduce the signs of old age, even when the |
| invalid is a youth. In this case, looking at the bold, strong hand of |
| the one, and the rather broken-backed appearance of the other, which |
| still retains its legibility although the t's have begun to lose their |
| crossing, we can say that the one was a young man and the other was |
| advanced in years without being positively decrepit." |
| |
| "Excellent!" cried Mr. Acton again. |
| |
| "There is a further point, however, which is subtler and of greater |
| interest. There is something in common between these hands. They belong |
| to men who are blood-relatives. It may be most obvious to you in the |
| Greek e's, but to me there are many small points which indicate the same |
| thing. I have no doubt at all that a family mannerism can be traced in |
| these two specimens of writing. I am only, of course, giving you |
| the leading results now of my examination of the paper. There were |
| twenty-three other deductions which would be of more interest to experts |
| than to you. They all tend to deepen the impression upon my mind that |
| the Cunninghams, father and son, had written this letter. |
| |
| "Having got so far, my next step was, of course, to examine into the |
| details of the crime, and to see how far they would help us. I went up |
| to the house with the Inspector, and saw all that was to be seen. The |
| wound upon the dead man was, as I was able to determine with absolute |
| confidence, fired from a revolver at the distance of something over |
| four yards. There was no powder-blackening on the clothes. Evidently, |
| therefore, Alec Cunningham had lied when he said that the two men were |
| struggling when the shot was fired. Again, both father and son agreed |
| as to the place where the man escaped into the road. At that point, |
| however, as it happens, there is a broadish ditch, moist at the bottom. |
| As there were no indications of bootmarks about this ditch, I was |
| absolutely sure not only that the Cunninghams had again lied, but that |
| there had never been any unknown man upon the scene at all. |
| |
| "And now I have to consider the motive of this singular crime. To get |
| at this, I endeavored first of all to solve the reason of the original |
| burglary at Mr. Acton's. I understood, from something which the Colonel |
| told us, that a lawsuit had been going on between you, Mr. Acton, and |
| the Cunninghams. Of course, it instantly occurred to me that they had |
| broken into your library with the intention of getting at some document |
| which might be of importance in the case." |
| |
| "Precisely so," said Mr. Acton. "There can be no possible doubt as to |
| their intentions. I have the clearest claim upon half of their present |
| estate, and if they could have found a single paper--which, fortunately, |
| was in the strong-box of my solicitors--they would undoubtedly have |
| crippled our case." |
| |
| "There you are," said Holmes, smiling. "It was a dangerous, reckless |
| attempt, in which I seem to trace the influence of young Alec. Having |
| found nothing they tried to divert suspicion by making it appear to be |
| an ordinary burglary, to which end they carried off whatever they could |
| lay their hands upon. That is all clear enough, but there was much that |
| was still obscure. What I wanted above all was to get the missing part |
| of that note. I was certain that Alec had torn it out of the dead man's |
| hand, and almost certain that he must have thrust it into the pocket of |
| his dressing-gown. Where else could he have put it? The only question |
| was whether it was still there. It was worth an effort to find out, and |
| for that object we all went up to the house. |
| |
| "The Cunninghams joined us, as you doubtless remember, outside the |
| kitchen door. It was, of course, of the very first importance that they |
| should not be reminded of the existence of this paper, otherwise they |
| would naturally destroy it without delay. The Inspector was about to |
| tell them the importance which we attached to it when, by the luckiest |
| chance in the world, I tumbled down in a sort of fit and so changed the |
| conversation. |
| |
| "Good heavens!" cried the Colonel, laughing, "do you mean to say all our |
| sympathy was wasted and your fit an imposture?" |
| |
| "Speaking professionally, it was admirably done," cried I, looking in |
| amazement at this man who was forever confounding me with some new phase |
| of his astuteness. |
| |
| "It is an art which is often useful," said he. "When I recovered I |
| managed, by a device which had perhaps some little merit of ingenuity, |
| to get old Cunningham to write the word 'twelve,' so that I might |
| compare it with the 'twelve' upon the paper." |
| |
| "Oh, what an ass I have been!" I exclaimed. |
| |
| "I could see that you were commiserating me over my weakness," said |
| Holmes, laughing. "I was sorry to cause you the sympathetic pain which |
| I know that you felt. We then went upstairs together, and having entered |
| the room and seen the dressing-gown hanging up behind the door, I |
| contrived, by upsetting a table, to engage their attention for the |
| moment, and slipped back to examine the pockets. I had hardly got the |
| paper, however--which was, as I had expected, in one of them--when the |
| two Cunninghams were on me, and would, I verily believe, have murdered |
| me then and there but for your prompt and friendly aid. As it is, I feel |
| that young man's grip on my throat now, and the father has twisted my |
| wrist round in the effort to get the paper out of my hand. They saw that |
| I must know all about it, you see, and the sudden change from absolute |
| security to complete despair made them perfectly desperate. |
| |
| "I had a little talk with old Cunningham afterwards as to the motive of |
| the crime. He was tractable enough, though his son was a perfect demon, |
| ready to blow out his own or anybody else's brains if he could have got |
| to his revolver. When Cunningham saw that the case against him was so |
| strong he lost all heart and made a clean breast of everything. It seems |
| that William had secretly followed his two masters on the night when |
| they made their raid upon Mr. Acton's, and having thus got them into |
| his power, proceeded, under threats of exposure, to levy blackmail upon |
| them. Mr. Alec, however, was a dangerous man to play games of that |
| sort with. It was a stroke of positive genius on his part to see in the |
| burglary scare which was convulsing the country side an opportunity of |
| plausibly getting rid of the man whom he feared. William was decoyed up |
| and shot, and had they only got the whole of the note and paid a little |
| more attention to detail in the accessories, it is very possible that |
| suspicion might never have been aroused." |
| |
| "And the note?" I asked. |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes placed the subjoined paper before us. |
| |
| If you will only come around to the east gate you it will |
| very much surprise you and be of the greatest service to you |
| and also to Annie Morrison. But say nothing to anyone upon |
| the matter. |
| |
| "It is very much the sort of thing that I expected," said he. "Of |
| course, we do not yet know what the relations may have been between Alec |
| Cunningham, William Kirwan, and Annie Morrison. The results shows that |
| the trap was skillfully baited. I am sure that you cannot fail to be |
| delighted with the traces of heredity shown in the p's and in the tails |
| of the g's. The absence of the i-dots in the old man's writing is also |
| most characteristic. Watson, I think our quiet rest in the country has |
| been a distinct success, and I shall certainly return much invigorated |
| to Baker Street to-morrow." |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure VII. The Crooked Man |
| |
| |
| One summer night, a few months after my marriage, I was seated by my own |
| hearth smoking a last pipe and nodding over a novel, for my day's work |
| had been an exhausting one. My wife had already gone upstairs, and the |
| sound of the locking of the hall door some time before told me that the |
| servants had also retired. I had risen from my seat and was knocking out |
| the ashes of my pipe when I suddenly heard the clang of the bell. |
| |
| I looked at the clock. It was a quarter to twelve. This could not be |
| a visitor at so late an hour. A patient, evidently, and possibly an |
| all-night sitting. With a wry face I went out into the hall and opened |
| the door. To my astonishment it was Sherlock Holmes who stood upon my |
| step. |
| |
| "Ah, Watson," said he, "I hoped that I might not be too late to catch |
| you." |
| |
| "My dear fellow, pray come in." |
| |
| "You look surprised, and no wonder! Relieved, too, I fancy! Hum! You |
| still smoke the Arcadia mixture of your bachelor days then! There's no |
| mistaking that fluffy ash upon your coat. It's easy to tell that you |
| have been accustomed to wear a uniform, Watson. You'll never pass as |
| a pure-bred civilian as long as you keep that habit of carrying your |
| handkerchief in your sleeve. Could you put me up to-night?" |
| |
| "With pleasure." |
| |
| "You told me that you had bachelor quarters for one, and I see that you |
| have no gentleman visitor at present. Your hat-stand proclaims as much." |
| |
| "I shall be delighted if you will stay." |
| |
| "Thank you. I'll fill the vacant peg then. Sorry to see that you've had |
| the British workman in the house. He's a token of evil. Not the drains, |
| I hope?" |
| |
| "No, the gas." |
| |
| "Ah! He has left two nail-marks from his boot upon your linoleum |
| just where the light strikes it. No, thank you, I had some supper at |
| Waterloo, but I'll smoke a pipe with you with pleasure." |
| |
| I handed him my pouch, and he seated himself opposite to me and smoked |
| for some time in silence. I was well aware that nothing but business |
| of importance would have brought him to me at such an hour, so I waited |
| patiently until he should come round to it. |
| |
| "I see that you are professionally rather busy just now," said he, |
| glancing very keenly across at me. |
| |
| "Yes, I've had a busy day," I answered. "It may seem very foolish in |
| your eyes," I added, "but really I don't know how you deduced it." |
| |
| Holmes chuckled to himself. |
| |
| "I have the advantage of knowing your habits, my dear Watson," said he. |
| "When your round is a short one you walk, and when it is a long one you |
| use a hansom. As I perceive that your boots, although used, are by |
| no means dirty, I cannot doubt that you are at present busy enough to |
| justify the hansom." |
| |
| "Excellent!" I cried. |
| |
| "Elementary," said he. "It is one of those instances where the reasoner |
| can produce an effect which seems remarkable to his neighbor, because |
| the latter has missed the one little point which is the basis of the |
| deduction. The same may be said, my dear fellow, for the effect of |
| some of these little sketches of yours, which is entirely meretricious, |
| depending as it does upon your retaining in your own hands some factors |
| in the problem which are never imparted to the reader. Now, at present |
| I am in the position of these same readers, for I hold in this hand |
| several threads of one of the strangest cases which ever perplexed a |
| man's brain, and yet I lack the one or two which are needful to complete |
| my theory. But I'll have them, Watson, I'll have them!" His eyes kindled |
| and a slight flush sprang into his thin cheeks. For an instant only. |
| When I glanced again his face had resumed that red-Indian composure |
| which had made so many regard him as a machine rather than a man. |
| |
| "The problem presents features of interest," said he. "I may even say |
| exceptional features of interest. I have already looked into the matter, |
| and have come, as I think, within sight of my solution. If you could |
| accompany me in that last step you might be of considerable service to |
| me." |
| |
| "I should be delighted." |
| |
| "Could you go as far as Aldershot to-morrow?" |
| |
| "I have no doubt Jackson would take my practice." |
| |
| "Very good. I want to start by the 11.10 from Waterloo." |
| |
| "That would give me time." |
| |
| "Then, if you are not too sleepy, I will give you a sketch of what has |
| happened, and of what remains to be done." |
| |
| "I was sleepy before you came. I am quite wakeful now." |
| |
| "I will compress the story as far as may be done without omitting |
| anything vital to the case. It is conceivable that you may even have |
| read some account of the matter. It is the supposed murder of Colonel |
| Barclay, of the Royal Munsters, at Aldershot, which I am investigating." |
| |
| "I have heard nothing of it." |
| |
| "It has not excited much attention yet, except locally. The facts are |
| only two days old. Briefly they are these: |
| |
| "The Royal Munsters is, as you know, one of the most famous Irish |
| regiments in the British army. It did wonders both in the Crimea and the |
| Mutiny, and has since that time distinguished itself upon every possible |
| occasion. It was commanded up to Monday night by James Barclay, |
| a gallant veteran, who started as a full private, was raised to |
| commissioned rank for his bravery at the time of the Mutiny, and so |
| lived to command the regiment in which he had once carried a musket. |
| |
| "Colonel Barclay had married at the time when he was a sergeant, and |
| his wife, whose maiden name was Miss Nancy Devoy, was the daughter of a |
| former color-sergeant in the same corps. There was, therefore, as can |
| be imagined, some little social friction when the young couple (for |
| they were still young) found themselves in their new surroundings. They |
| appear, however, to have quickly adapted themselves, and Mrs. Barclay |
| has always, I understand, been as popular with the ladies of the |
| regiment as her husband was with his brother officers. I may add that |
| she was a woman of great beauty, and that even now, when she has been |
| married for upwards of thirty years, she is still of a striking and |
| queenly appearance. |
| |
| "Colonel Barclay's family life appears to have been a uniformly happy |
| one. Major Murphy, to whom I owe most of my facts, assures me that he |
| has never heard of any misunderstanding between the pair. On the whole, |
| he thinks that Barclay's devotion to his wife was greater than his |
| wife's to Barclay. He was acutely uneasy if he were absent from her for |
| a day. She, on the other hand, though devoted and faithful, was less |
| obtrusively affectionate. But they were regarded in the regiment as |
| the very model of a middle-aged couple. There was absolutely nothing in |
| their mutual relations to prepare people for the tragedy which was to |
| follow. |
| |
| "Colonel Barclay himself seems to have had some singular traits in his |
| character. He was a dashing, jovial old soldier in his usual mood, |
| but there were occasions on which he seemed to show himself capable |
| of considerable violence and vindictiveness. This side of his nature, |
| however, appears never to have been turned towards his wife. Another |
| fact, which had struck Major Murphy and three out of five of the other |
| officers with whom I conversed, was the singular sort of depression |
| which came upon him at times. As the major expressed it, the smile had |
| often been struck from his mouth, as if by some invisible hand, when he |
| has been joining the gayeties and chaff of the mess-table. For days on |
| end, when the mood was on him, he has been sunk in the deepest gloom. |
| This and a certain tinge of superstition were the only unusual traits |
| in his character which his brother officers had observed. The latter |
| peculiarity took the form of a dislike to being left alone, especially |
| after dark. This puerile feature in a nature which was conspicuously |
| manly had often given rise to comment and conjecture. |
| |
| "The first battalion of the Royal Munsters (which is the old 117th) has |
| been stationed at Aldershot for some years. The married officers live |
| out of barracks, and the Colonel has during all this time occupied a |
| villa called Lachine, about half a mile from the north camp. The house |
| stands in its own grounds, but the west side of it is not more than |
| thirty yards from the high-road. A coachman and two maids form the |
| staff of servants. These with their master and mistress were the sole |
| occupants of Lachine, for the Barclays had no children, nor was it usual |
| for them to have resident visitors. |
| |
| "Now for the events at Lachine between nine and ten on the evening of |
| last Monday." |
| |
| "Mrs. Barclay was, it appears, a member of the Roman Catholic Church, |
| and had interested herself very much in the establishment of the Guild |
| of St. George, which was formed in connection with the Watt Street |
| Chapel for the purpose of supplying the poor with cast-off clothing. |
| A meeting of the Guild had been held that evening at eight, and Mrs. |
| Barclay had hurried over her dinner in order to be present at it. When |
| leaving the house she was heard by the coachman to make some commonplace |
| remark to her husband, and to assure him that she would be back before |
| very long. She then called for Miss Morrison, a young lady who lives |
| in the next villa, and the two went off together to their meeting. It |
| lasted forty minutes, and at a quarter-past nine Mrs. Barclay returned |
| home, having left Miss Morrison at her door as she passed. |
| |
| "There is a room which is used as a morning-room at Lachine. This faces |
| the road and opens by a large glass folding-door on to the lawn. The |
| lawn is thirty yards across, and is only divided from the highway by |
| a low wall with an iron rail above it. It was into this room that Mrs. |
| Barclay went upon her return. The blinds were not down, for the room was |
| seldom used in the evening, but Mrs. Barclay herself lit the lamp and |
| then rang the bell, asking Jane Stewart, the house-maid, to bring her |
| a cup of tea, which was quite contrary to her usual habits. The Colonel |
| had been sitting in the dining-room, but hearing that his wife had |
| returned he joined her in the morning-room. The coachman saw him cross |
| the hall and enter it. He was never seen again alive. |
| |
| "The tea which had been ordered was brought up at the end of ten |
| minutes; but the maid, as she approached the door, was surprised to |
| hear the voices of her master and mistress in furious altercation. She |
| knocked without receiving any answer, and even turned the handle, but |
| only to find that the door was locked upon the inside. Naturally enough |
| she ran down to tell the cook, and the two women with the coachman came |
| up into the hall and listened to the dispute which was still raging. |
| They all agreed that only two voices were to be heard, those of Barclay |
| and of his wife. Barclay's remarks were subdued and abrupt, so that none |
| of them were audible to the listeners. The lady's, on the other hand, |
| were most bitter, and when she raised her voice could be plainly heard. |
| 'You coward!' she repeated over and over again. 'What can be done now? |
| What can be done now? Give me back my life. I will never so much as |
| breathe the same air with you again! You coward! You coward!' Those were |
| scraps of her conversation, ending in a sudden dreadful cry in the man's |
| voice, with a crash, and a piercing scream from the woman. Convinced |
| that some tragedy had occurred, the coachman rushed to the door and |
| strove to force it, while scream after scream issued from within. He was |
| unable, however, to make his way in, and the maids were too distracted |
| with fear to be of any assistance to him. A sudden thought struck him, |
| however, and he ran through the hall door and round to the lawn upon |
| which the long French windows open. One side of the window was open, |
| which I understand was quite usual in the summer-time, and he passed |
| without difficulty into the room. His mistress had ceased to scream and |
| was stretched insensible upon a couch, while with his feet tilted over |
| the side of an arm-chair, and his head upon the ground near the corner |
| of the fender, was lying the unfortunate soldier stone dead in a pool of |
| his own blood. |
| |
| "Naturally, the coachman's first thought, on finding that he could do |
| nothing for his master, was to open the door. But here an unexpected and |
| singular difficulty presented itself. The key was not in the inner side |
| of the door, nor could he find it anywhere in the room. He went out |
| again, therefore, through the window, and having obtained the help of |
| a policeman and of a medical man, he returned. The lady, against whom |
| naturally the strongest suspicion rested, was removed to her room, still |
| in a state of insensibility. The Colonel's body was then placed upon the |
| sofa, and a careful examination made of the scene of the tragedy. |
| |
| "The injury from which the unfortunate veteran was suffering was found |
| to be a jagged cut some two inches long at the back part of his head, |
| which had evidently been caused by a violent blow from a blunt weapon. |
| Nor was it difficult to guess what that weapon may have been. Upon the |
| floor, close to the body, was lying a singular club of hard carved wood |
| with a bone handle. The Colonel possessed a varied collection of weapons |
| brought from the different countries in which he had fought, and it |
| is conjectured by the police that his club was among his trophies. The |
| servants deny having seen it before, but among the numerous curiosities |
| in the house it is possible that it may have been overlooked. Nothing |
| else of importance was discovered in the room by the police, save the |
| inexplicable fact that neither upon Mrs. Barclay's person nor upon that |
| of the victim nor in any part of the room was the missing key to |
| be found. The door had eventually to be opened by a locksmith from |
| Aldershot. |
| |
| "That was the state of things, Watson, when upon the Tuesday morning I, |
| at the request of Major Murphy, went down to Aldershot to supplement |
| the efforts of the police. I think that you will acknowledge that the |
| problem was already one of interest, but my observations soon made me |
| realize that it was in truth much more extraordinary than would at first |
| sight appear. |
| |
| "Before examining the room I cross-questioned the servants, but only |
| succeeded in eliciting the facts which I have already stated. One other |
| detail of interest was remembered by Jane Stewart, the housemaid. You |
| will remember that on hearing the sound of the quarrel she descended and |
| returned with the other servants. On that first occasion, when she was |
| alone, she says that the voices of her master and mistress were sunk |
| so low that she could hear hardly anything, and judged by their tones |
| rather than their words that they had fallen out. On my pressing her, |
| however, she remembered that she heard the word David uttered twice by |
| the lady. The point is of the utmost importance as guiding us towards |
| the reason of the sudden quarrel. The Colonel's name, you remember, was |
| James. |
| |
| "There was one thing in the case which had made the deepest impression |
| both upon the servants and the police. This was the contortion of the |
| Colonel's face. It had set, according to their account, into the most |
| dreadful expression of fear and horror which a human countenance is |
| capable of assuming. More than one person fainted at the mere sight |
| of him, so terrible was the effect. It was quite certain that he had |
| foreseen his fate, and that it had caused him the utmost horror. This, |
| of course, fitted in well enough with the police theory, if the Colonel |
| could have seen his wife making a murderous attack upon him. Nor was |
| the fact of the wound being on the back of his head a fatal objection to |
| this, as he might have turned to avoid the blow. No information could |
| be got from the lady herself, who was temporarily insane from an acute |
| attack of brain-fever. |
| |
| "From the police I learned that Miss Morrison, who you remember went out |
| that evening with Mrs. Barclay, denied having any knowledge of what it |
| was which had caused the ill-humor in which her companion had returned. |
| |
| "Having gathered these facts, Watson, I smoked several pipes over them, |
| trying to separate those which were crucial from others which were |
| merely incidental. There could be no question that the most distinctive |
| and suggestive point in the case was the singular disappearance of the |
| door-key. A most careful search had failed to discover it in the room. |
| Therefore it must have been taken from it. But neither the Colonel |
| nor the Colonel's wife could have taken it. That was perfectly clear. |
| Therefore a third person must have entered the room. And that third |
| person could only have come in through the window. It seemed to me that |
| a careful examination of the room and the lawn might possibly reveal |
| some traces of this mysterious individual. You know my methods, Watson. |
| There was not one of them which I did not apply to the inquiry. And it |
| ended by my discovering traces, but very different ones from those which |
| I had expected. There had been a man in the room, and he had crossed |
| the lawn coming from the road. I was able to obtain five very clear |
| impressions of his foot-marks: one in the roadway itself, at the point |
| where he had climbed the low wall, two on the lawn, and two very faint |
| ones upon the stained boards near the window where he had entered. |
| He had apparently rushed across the lawn, for his toe-marks were much |
| deeper than his heels. But it was not the man who surprised me. It was |
| his companion." |
| |
| "His companion!" |
| |
| Holmes pulled a large sheet of tissue-paper out of his pocket and |
| carefully unfolded it upon his knee. |
| |
| "What do you make of that?" he asked. |
| |
| The paper was covered with he tracings of the foot-marks of some small |
| animal. It had five well-marked foot-pads, an indication of long nails, |
| and the whole print might be nearly as large as a dessert-spoon. |
| |
| "It's a dog," said I. |
| |
| "Did you ever hear of a dog running up a curtain? I found distinct |
| traces that this creature had done so." |
| |
| "A monkey, then?" |
| |
| "But it is not the print of a monkey." |
| |
| "What can it be, then?" |
| |
| "Neither dog nor cat nor monkey nor any creature that we are familiar |
| with. I have tried to reconstruct it from the measurements. Here are |
| four prints where the beast has been standing motionless. You see that |
| it is no less than fifteen inches from fore-foot to hind. Add to that |
| the length of neck and head, and you get a creature not much less than |
| two feet long--probably more if there is any tail. But now observe this |
| other measurement. The animal has been moving, and we have the length |
| of its stride. In each case it is only about three inches. You have an |
| indication, you see, of a long body with very short legs attached to it. |
| It has not been considerate enough to leave any of its hair behind it. |
| But its general shape must be what I have indicated, and it can run up a |
| curtain, and it is carnivorous." |
| |
| "How do you deduce that?" |
| |
| "Because it ran up the curtain. A canary's cage was hanging in the |
| window, and its aim seems to have been to get at the bird." |
| |
| "Then what was the beast?" |
| |
| "Ah, if I could give it a name it might go a long way towards solving |
| the case. On the whole, it was probably some creature of the weasel and |
| stoat tribe--and yet it is larger than any of these that I have seen." |
| |
| "But what had it to do with the crime?" |
| |
| "That, also, is still obscure. But we have learned a good deal, you |
| perceive. We know that a man stood in the road looking at the quarrel |
| between the Barclays--the blinds were up and the room lighted. We know, |
| also, that he ran across the lawn, entered the room, accompanied by a |
| strange animal, and that he either struck the Colonel or, as is equally |
| possible, that the Colonel fell down from sheer fright at the sight of |
| him, and cut his head on the corner of the fender. Finally, we have the |
| curious fact that the intruder carried away the key with him when he |
| left." |
| |
| "Your discoveries seem to have left the business more obscure that it |
| was before," said I. |
| |
| "Quite so. They undoubtedly showed that the affair was much deeper than |
| was at first conjectured. I thought the matter over, and I came to |
| the conclusion that I must approach the case from another aspect. But |
| really, Watson, I am keeping you up, and I might just as well tell you |
| all this on our way to Aldershot to-morrow." |
| |
| "Thank you, you have gone rather too far to stop." |
| |
| "It is quite certain that when Mrs. Barclay left the house at half-past |
| seven she was on good terms with her husband. She was never, as I think |
| I have said, ostentatiously affectionate, but she was heard by the |
| coachman chatting with the Colonel in a friendly fashion. Now, it was |
| equally certain that, immediately on her return, she had gone to the |
| room in which she was least likely to see her husband, had flown to tea |
| as an agitated woman will, and finally, on his coming in to her, had |
| broken into violent recriminations. Therefore something had occurred |
| between seven-thirty and nine o'clock which had completely altered her |
| feelings towards him. But Miss Morrison had been with her during the |
| whole of that hour and a half. It was absolutely certain, therefore, in |
| spite of her denial, that she must know something of the matter. |
| |
| "My first conjecture was, that possibly there had been some passages |
| between this young lady and the old soldier, which the former had now |
| confessed to the wife. That would account for the angry return, and |
| also for the girl's denial that anything had occurred. Nor would it be |
| entirely incompatible with most of the words overhead. But there was the |
| reference to David, and there was the known affection of the Colonel for |
| his wife, to weigh against it, to say nothing of the tragic intrusion |
| of this other man, which might, of course, be entirely disconnected with |
| what had gone before. It was not easy to pick one's steps, but, on the |
| whole, I was inclined to dismiss the idea that there had been anything |
| between the Colonel and Miss Morrison, but more than ever convinced that |
| the young lady held the clue as to what it was which had turned Mrs. |
| Barclay to hatred of her husband. I took the obvious course, therefore, |
| of calling upon Miss M., of explaining to her that I was perfectly |
| certain that she held the facts in her possession, and of assuring her |
| that her friend, Mrs. Barclay, might find herself in the dock upon a |
| capital charge unless the matter were cleared up. |
| |
| "Miss Morrison is a little ethereal slip of a girl, with timid eyes |
| and blond hair, but I found her by no means wanting in shrewdness and |
| common-sense. She sat thinking for some time after I had spoken, and |
| then, turning to me with a brisk air of resolution, she broke into a |
| remarkable statement which I will condense for your benefit. |
| |
| "'I promised my friend that I would say nothing of the matter, and a |
| promise is a promise,' said she; 'but if I can really help her when |
| so serious a charge is laid against her, and when her own mouth, poor |
| darling, is closed by illness, then I think I am absolved from my |
| promise. I will tell you exactly what happened upon Monday evening. |
| |
| "'We were returning from the Watt Street Mission about a quarter to nine |
| o'clock. On our way we had to pass through Hudson Street, which is |
| a very quiet thoroughfare. There is only one lamp in it, upon the |
| left-hand side, and as we approached this lamp I saw a man coming |
| towards us with his back very bent, and something like a box slung over |
| one of his shoulders. He appeared to be deformed, for he carried his |
| head low and walked with his knees bent. We were passing him when he |
| raised his face to look at us in the circle of light thrown by the lamp, |
| and as he did so he stopped and screamed out in a dreadful voice, "My |
| God, it's Nancy!" Mrs. Barclay turned as white as death, and would have |
| fallen down had the dreadful-looking creature not caught hold of her. I |
| was going to call for the police, but she, to my surprise, spoke quite |
| civilly to the fellow. |
| |
| "'"I thought you had been dead this thirty years, Henry," said she, in a |
| shaking voice. |
| |
| "'"So I have," said he, and it was awful to hear the tones that he said |
| it in. He had a very dark, fearsome face, and a gleam in his eyes that |
| comes back to me in my dreams. His hair and whiskers were shot with |
| gray, and his face was all crinkled and puckered like a withered apple. |
| |
| "'"Just walk on a little way, dear," said Mrs. Barclay; "I want to have |
| a word with this man. There is nothing to be afraid of." She tried to |
| speak boldly, but she was still deadly pale and could hardly get her |
| words out for the trembling of her lips. |
| |
| "'I did as she asked me, and they talked together for a few minutes. |
| Then she came down the street with her eyes blazing, and I saw the |
| crippled wretch standing by the lamp-post and shaking his clenched fists |
| in the air as if he were mad with rage. She never said a word until we |
| were at the door here, when she took me by the hand and begged me to |
| tell no one what had happened. |
| |
| "'"It's an old acquaintance of mine who has come down in the world," |
| said she. When I promised her I would say nothing she kissed me, and I |
| have never seen her since. I have told you now the whole truth, and if |
| I withheld it from the police it is because I did not realize then the |
| danger in which my dear friend stood. I know that it can only be to her |
| advantage that everything should be known.' |
| |
| "There was her statement, Watson, and to me, as you can imagine, it was |
| like a light on a dark night. Everything which had been disconnected |
| before began at once to assume its true place, and I had a shadowy |
| presentiment of the whole sequence of events. My next step obviously was |
| to find the man who had produced such a remarkable impression upon Mrs. |
| Barclay. If he were still in Aldershot it should not be a very difficult |
| matter. There are not such a very great number of civilians, and a |
| deformed man was sure to have attracted attention. I spent a day in the |
| search, and by evening--this very evening, Watson--I had run him down. |
| The man's name is Henry Wood, and he lives in lodgings in this same |
| street in which the ladies met him. He has only been five days in the |
| place. In the character of a registration-agent I had a most interesting |
| gossip with his landlady. The man is by trade a conjurer and performer, |
| going round the canteens after nightfall, and giving a little |
| entertainment at each. He carries some creature about with him in that |
| box; about which the landlady seemed to be in considerable trepidation, |
| for she had never seen an animal like it. He uses it in some of his |
| tricks according to her account. So much the woman was able to tell me, |
| and also that it was a wonder the man lived, seeing how twisted he was, |
| and that he spoke in a strange tongue sometimes, and that for the last |
| two nights she had heard him groaning and weeping in his bedroom. He |
| was all right, as far as money went, but in his deposit he had given her |
| what looked like a bad florin. She showed it to me, Watson, and it was |
| an Indian rupee. |
| |
| "So now, my dear fellow, you see exactly how we stand and why it is I |
| want you. It is perfectly plain that after the ladies parted from this |
| man he followed them at a distance, that he saw the quarrel between |
| husband and wife through the window, that he rushed in, and that |
| the creature which he carried in his box got loose. That is all very |
| certain. But he is the only person in this world who can tell us exactly |
| what happened in that room." |
| |
| "And you intend to ask him?" |
| |
| "Most certainly--but in the presence of a witness." |
| |
| "And I am the witness?" |
| |
| "If you will be so good. If he can clear the matter up, well and good. |
| If he refuses, we have no alternative but to apply for a warrant." |
| |
| "But how do you know he'll be there when we return?" |
| |
| "You may be sure that I took some precautions. I have one of my Baker |
| Street boys mounting guard over him who would stick to him like a burr, |
| go where he might. We shall find him in Hudson Street to-morrow, Watson, |
| and meanwhile I should be the criminal myself if I kept you out of bed |
| any longer." |
| |
| It was midday when we found ourselves at the scene of the tragedy, and, |
| under my companion's guidance, we made our way at once to Hudson Street. |
| In spite of his capacity for concealing his emotions, I could easily see |
| that Holmes was in a state of suppressed excitement, while I was myself |
| tingling with that half-sporting, half-intellectual pleasure which |
| I invariably experienced when I associated myself with him in his |
| investigations. |
| |
| "This is the street," said he, as we turned into a short thoroughfare |
| lined with plain two-storied brick houses. "Ah, here is Simpson to |
| report." |
| |
| "He's in all right, Mr. Holmes," cried a small street Arab, running up |
| to us. |
| |
| "Good, Simpson!" said Holmes, patting him on the head. "Come along, |
| Watson. This is the house." He sent in his card with a message that he |
| had come on important business, and a moment later we were face to face |
| with the man whom we had come to see. In spite of the warm weather he |
| was crouching over a fire, and the little room was like an oven. The |
| man sat all twisted and huddled in his chair in a way which gave an |
| indescribably impression of deformity; but the face which he turned |
| towards us, though worn and swarthy, must at some time have been |
| remarkable for its beauty. He looked suspiciously at us now out of |
| yellow-shot, bilious eyes, and, without speaking or rising, he waved |
| towards two chairs. |
| |
| "Mr. Henry Wood, late of India, I believe," said Holmes, affably. "I've |
| come over this little matter of Colonel Barclay's death." |
| |
| "What should I know about that?" |
| |
| "That's what I want to ascertain. You know, I suppose, that unless the |
| matter is cleared up, Mrs. Barclay, who is an old friend of yours, will |
| in all probability be tried for murder." |
| |
| The man gave a violent start. |
| |
| "I don't know who you are," he cried, "nor how you come to know what you |
| do know, but will you swear that this is true that you tell me?" |
| |
| "Why, they are only waiting for her to come to her senses to arrest |
| her." |
| |
| "My God! Are you in the police yourself?" |
| |
| "No." |
| |
| "What business is it of yours, then?" |
| |
| "It's every man's business to see justice done." |
| |
| "You can take my word that she is innocent." |
| |
| "Then you are guilty." |
| |
| "No, I am not." |
| |
| "Who killed Colonel James Barclay, then?" |
| |
| "It was a just providence that killed him. But, mind you this, that if |
| I had knocked his brains out, as it was in my heart to do, he would have |
| had no more than his due from my hands. If his own guilty conscience had |
| not struck him down it is likely enough that I might have had his blood |
| upon my soul. You want me to tell the story. Well, I don't know why I |
| shouldn't, for there's no cause for me to be ashamed of it. |
| |
| "It was in this way, sir. You see me now with my back like a camel and |
| my ribs all awry, but there was a time when Corporal Henry Wood was the |
| smartest man in the 117th foot. We were in India then, in cantonments, |
| at a place we'll call Bhurtee. Barclay, who died the other day, was |
| sergeant in the same company as myself, and the belle of the regiment, |
| ay, and the finest girl that ever had the breath of life between her |
| lips, was Nancy Devoy, the daughter of the color-sergeant. There were |
| two men that loved her, and one that she loved, and you'll smile when |
| you look at this poor thing huddled before the fire, and hear me say |
| that it was for my good looks that she loved me. |
| |
| "Well, though I had her heart, her father was set upon her marrying |
| Barclay. I was a harum-scarum, reckless lad, and he had had an |
| education, and was already marked for the sword-belt. But the girl held |
| true to me, and it seemed that I would have had her when the Mutiny |
| broke out, and all hell was loose in the country. |
| |
| "We were shut up in Bhurtee, the regiment of us with half a battery of |
| artillery, a company of Sikhs, and a lot of civilians and women-folk. |
| There were ten thousand rebels round us, and they were as keen as a set |
| of terriers round a rat-cage. About the second week of it our water gave |
| out, and it was a question whether we could communicate with General |
| Neill's column, which was moving up country. It was our only chance, for |
| we could not hope to fight our way out with all the women and children, |
| so I volunteered to go out and to warn General Neill of our danger. My |
| offer was accepted, and I talked it over with Sergeant Barclay, who was |
| supposed to know the ground better than any other man, and who drew up |
| a route by which I might get through the rebel lines. At ten o'clock the |
| same night I started off upon my journey. There were a thousand lives to |
| save, but it was of only one that I was thinking when I dropped over the |
| wall that night. |
| |
| "My way ran down a dried-up watercourse, which we hoped would screen |
| me from the enemy's sentries; but as I crept round the corner of it |
| I walked right into six of them, who were crouching down in the dark |
| waiting for me. In an instant I was stunned with a blow and bound hand |
| and foot. But the real blow was to my heart and not to my head, for as |
| I came to and listened to as much as I could understand of their talk, |
| I heard enough to tell me that my comrade, the very man who had arranged |
| the way that I was to take, had betrayed me by means of a native servant |
| into the hands of the enemy. |
| |
| "Well, there's no need for me to dwell on that part of it. You know now |
| what James Barclay was capable of. Bhurtee was relieved by Neill next |
| day, but the rebels took me away with them in their retreat, and it was |
| many a long year before ever I saw a white face again. I was tortured |
| and tried to get away, and was captured and tortured again. You can see |
| for yourselves the state in which I was left. Some of them that fled |
| into Nepaul took me with them, and then afterwards I was up past |
| Darjeeling. The hill-folk up there murdered the rebels who had me, and |
| I became their slave for a time until I escaped; but instead of going |
| south I had to go north, until I found myself among the Afghans. There |
| I wandered about for many a year, and at last came back to the Punjab, |
| where I lived mostly among the natives and picked up a living by the |
| conjuring tricks that I had learned. What use was it for me, a wretched |
| cripple, to go back to England or to make myself known to my old |
| comrades? Even my wish for revenge would not make me do that. I had |
| rather that Nancy and my old pals should think of Harry Wood as having |
| died with a straight back, than see him living and crawling with a stick |
| like a chimpanzee. They never doubted that I was dead, and I meant that |
| they never should. I heard that Barclay had married Nancy, and that he |
| was rising rapidly in the regiment, but even that did not make me speak. |
| |
| "But when one gets old one has a longing for home. For years I've been |
| dreaming of the bright green fields and the hedges of England. At last I |
| determined to see them before I died. I saved enough to bring me across, |
| and then I came here where the soldiers are, for I know their ways and |
| how to amuse them and so earn enough to keep me." |
| |
| "Your narrative is most interesting," said Sherlock Holmes. "I have |
| already heard of your meeting with Mrs. Barclay, and your mutual |
| recognition. You then, as I understand, followed her home and saw |
| through the window an altercation between her husband and her, in which |
| she doubtless cast his conduct to you in his teeth. Your own feelings |
| overcame you, and you ran across the lawn and broke in upon them." |
| |
| "I did, sir, and at the sight of me he looked as I have never seen a man |
| look before, and over he went with his head on the fender. But he was |
| dead before he fell. I read death on his face as plain as I can read |
| that text over the fire. The bare sight of me was like a bullet through |
| his guilty heart." |
| |
| "And then?" |
| |
| "Then Nancy fainted, and I caught up the key of the door from her hand, |
| intending to unlock it and get help. But as I was doing it it seemed to |
| me better to leave it alone and get away, for the thing might look black |
| against me, and any way my secret would be out if I were taken. In my |
| haste I thrust the key into my pocket, and dropped my stick while I was |
| chasing Teddy, who had run up the curtain. When I got him into his box, |
| from which he had slipped, I was off as fast as I could run." |
| |
| "Who's Teddy?" asked Holmes. |
| |
| The man leaned over and pulled up the front of a kind of hutch in |
| the corner. In an instant out there slipped a beautiful reddish-brown |
| creature, thin and lithe, with the legs of a stoat, a long, thin nose, |
| and a pair of the finest red eyes that ever I saw in an animal's head. |
| |
| "It's a mongoose," I cried. |
| |
| "Well, some call them that, and some call them ichneumon," said the |
| man. "Snake-catcher is what I call them, and Teddy is amazing quick on |
| cobras. I have one here without the fangs, and Teddy catches it every |
| night to please the folk in the canteen. |
| |
| "Any other point, sir?" |
| |
| "Well, we may have to apply to you again if Mrs. Barclay should prove to |
| be in serious trouble." |
| |
| "In that case, of course, I'd come forward." |
| |
| "But if not, there is no object in raking up this scandal against a |
| dead man, foully as he has acted. You have at least the satisfaction |
| of knowing that for thirty years of his life his conscience bitterly |
| reproached him for this wicked deed. Ah, there goes Major Murphy on the |
| other side of the street. Good-by, Wood. I want to learn if anything has |
| happened since yesterday." |
| |
| We were in time to overtake the major before he reached the corner. |
| |
| "Ah, Holmes," he said: "I suppose you have heard that all this fuss has |
| come to nothing?" |
| |
| "What then?" |
| |
| "The inquest is just over. The medical evidence showed conclusively |
| that death was due to apoplexy. You see it was quite a simple case after |
| all." |
| |
| "Oh, remarkably superficial," said Holmes, smiling. "Come, Watson, I |
| don't think we shall be wanted in Aldershot any more." |
| |
| "There's one thing," said I, as we walked down to the station. "If the |
| husband's name was James, and the other was Henry, what was this talk |
| about David?" |
| |
| "That one word, my dear Watson, should have told me the whole story had |
| I been the ideal reasoner which you are so fond of depicting. It was |
| evidently a term of reproach." |
| |
| "Of reproach?" |
| |
| "Yes; David strayed a little occasionally, you know, and on one occasion |
| in the same direction as Sergeant James Barclay. You remember the small |
| affair of Uriah and Bathsheba? My biblical knowledge is a trifle rusty, |
| I fear, but you will find the story in the first or second of Samuel." |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure VIII. The Resident Patient |
| |
| |
| Glancing over the somewhat incoherent series of Memoirs with which I |
| have endeavored to illustrate a few of the mental peculiarities of my |
| friend Mr. Sherlock Holmes, I have been struck by the difficulty which I |
| have experienced in picking out examples which shall in every way answer |
| my purpose. For in those cases in which Holmes has performed some tour |
| de force of analytical reasoning, and has demonstrated the value of his |
| peculiar methods of investigation, the facts themselves have often been |
| so slight or so commonplace that I could not feel justified in laying |
| them before the public. On the other hand, it has frequently happened |
| that he has been concerned in some research where the facts have been of |
| the most remarkable and dramatic character, but where the share which he |
| has himself taken in determining their causes has been less pronounced |
| than I, as his biographer, could wish. The small matter which I have |
| chronicled under the heading of "A Study in Scarlet," and that other |
| later one connected with the loss of the Gloria Scott, may serve as |
| examples of this Scylla and Charybdis which are forever threatening the |
| historian. It may be that in the business of which I am now about to |
| write the part which my friend played is not sufficiently accentuated; |
| and yet the whole train of circumstances is so remarkable that I cannot |
| bring myself to omit it entirely from this series. |
| |
| It had been a close, rainy day in October. Our blinds were half-drawn, |
| and Holmes lay curled upon the sofa, reading and re-reading a letter |
| which he had received by the morning post. For myself, my term of |
| service in India had trained me to stand heat better than cold, and |
| a thermometer of 90 was no hardship. But the paper was uninteresting. |
| Parliament had risen. Everybody was out of town, and I yearned for the |
| glades of the New Forest or the shingle of Southsea. A depleted bank |
| account had caused me to postpone my holiday, and as to my companion, |
| neither the country nor the sea presented the slightest attraction to |
| him. He loved to lie in the very centre of five millions of people, with |
| his filaments stretching out and running through them, responsive to |
| every little rumor or suspicion of unsolved crime. Appreciation of |
| Nature found no place among his many gifts, and his only change was |
| when he turned his mind from the evil-doer of the town to track down his |
| brother of the country. |
| |
| Finding that Holmes was too absorbed for conversation, I had tossed |
| aside the barren paper, and leaning back in my chair, I fell into a |
| brown study. Suddenly my companion's voice broke in upon my thoughts. |
| |
| "You are right, Watson," said he. "It does seem a very preposterous way |
| of settling a dispute." |
| |
| "Most preposterous!" I exclaimed, and then, suddenly realizing how |
| he had echoed the inmost thought of my soul, I sat up in my chair and |
| stared at him in blank amazement. |
| |
| "What is this, Holmes?" I cried. "This is beyond anything which I could |
| have imagined." |
| |
| He laughed heartily at my perplexity. |
| |
| "You remember," said he, "that some little time ago, when I read you the |
| passage in one of Poe's sketches, in which a close reasoner follows the |
| unspoken thought of his companion, you were inclined to treat the |
| matter as a mere tour de force of the author. On my remarking that I |
| was constantly in the habit of doing the same thing you expressed |
| incredulity." |
| |
| "Oh, no!" |
| |
| "Perhaps not with your tongue, my dear Watson, but certainly with your |
| eyebrows. So when I saw you throw down your paper and enter upon a train |
| of thought, I was very happy to have the opportunity of reading it |
| off, and eventually of breaking into it, as a proof that I had been in |
| rapport with you." |
| |
| But I was still far from satisfied. "In the example which you read to |
| me," said I, "the reasoner drew his conclusions from the actions of the |
| man whom he observed. If I remember right, he stumbled over a heap |
| of stones, looked up at the stars, and so on. But I have been seated |
| quietly in my chair, and what clues can I have given you?" |
| |
| "You do yourself an injustice. The features are given to man as the |
| means by which he shall express his emotions, and yours are faithful |
| servants." |
| |
| "Do you mean to say that you read my train of thoughts from my |
| features?" |
| |
| "Your features, and especially your eyes. Perhaps you cannot yourself |
| recall how your reverie commenced?" |
| |
| "No, I cannot." |
| |
| "Then I will tell you. After throwing down your paper, which was the |
| action which drew my attention to you, you sat for half a minute with |
| a vacant expression. Then your eyes fixed themselves upon your |
| newly-framed picture of General Gordon, and I saw by the alteration in |
| your face that a train of thought had been started. But it did not lead |
| very far. Your eyes turned across to the unframed portrait of Henry Ward |
| Beecher which stands upon the top of your books. You then glanced up at |
| the wall, and of course your meaning was obvious. You were thinking |
| that if the portrait were framed it would just cover that bare space and |
| correspond with Gordon's picture over there." |
| |
| "You have followed me wonderfully!" I exclaimed. |
| |
| "So far I could hardly have gone astray. But now your thoughts went |
| back to Beecher, and you looked hard across as if you were studying |
| the character in his features. Then your eyes ceased to pucker, but |
| you continued to look across, and your face was thoughtful. You were |
| recalling the incidents of Beecher's career. I was well aware that you |
| could not do this without thinking of the mission which he undertook |
| on behalf of the North at the time of the Civil War, for I remember |
| you expressing your passionate indignation at the way in which he was |
| received by the more turbulent of our people. You felt so strongly about |
| it that I knew you could not think of Beecher without thinking of that |
| also. When a moment later I saw your eyes wander away from the picture, |
| I suspected that your mind had now turned to the Civil War, and when |
| I observed that your lips set, your eyes sparkled, and your hands |
| clinched, I was positive that you were indeed thinking of the gallantry |
| which was shown by both sides in that desperate struggle. But then, |
| again, your face grew sadder; you shook your head. You were dwelling |
| upon the sadness and horror and useless waste of life. Your hand stole |
| towards your own old wound, and a smile quivered on your lips, |
| which showed me that the ridiculous side of this method of settling |
| international questions had forced itself upon your mind. At this point |
| I agreed with you that it was preposterous, and was glad to find that |
| all my deductions had been correct." |
| |
| "Absolutely!" said I. "And now that you have explained it, I confess |
| that I am as amazed as before." |
| |
| "It was very superficial, my dear Watson, I assure you. I should not |
| have intruded it upon your attention had you not shown some incredulity |
| the other day. But the evening has brought a breeze with it. What do you |
| say to a ramble through London?" |
| |
| I was weary of our little sitting-room and gladly acquiesced. For |
| three hours we strolled about together, watching the ever-changing |
| kaleidoscope of life as it ebbs and flows through Fleet Street and the |
| Strand. His characteristic talk, with its keen observance of detail |
| and subtle power of inference held me amused and enthralled. It was ten |
| o'clock before we reached Baker Street again. A brougham was waiting at |
| our door. |
| |
| "Hum! A doctor's--general practitioner, I perceive," said Holmes. "Not |
| been long in practice, but has had a good deal to do. Come to consult |
| us, I fancy! Lucky we came back!" |
| |
| I was sufficiently conversant with Holmes's methods to be able to follow |
| his reasoning, and to see that the nature and state of the various |
| medical instruments in the wicker basket which hung in the lamplight |
| inside the brougham had given him the data for his swift deduction. |
| The light in our window above showed that this late visit was indeed |
| intended for us. With some curiosity as to what could have sent a |
| brother medico to us at such an hour, I followed Holmes into our |
| sanctum. |
| |
| A pale, taper-faced man with sandy whiskers rose up from a chair by the |
| fire as we entered. His age may not have been more than three or four |
| and thirty, but his haggard expression and unhealthy hue told of a life |
| which has sapped his strength and robbed him of his youth. His manner |
| was nervous and shy, like that of a sensitive gentleman, and the thin |
| white hand which he laid on the mantelpiece as he rose was that of an |
| artist rather than of a surgeon. His dress was quiet and sombre--a black |
| frock-coat, dark trousers, and a touch of color about his necktie. |
| |
| "Good-evening, doctor," said Holmes, cheerily. "I am glad to see that |
| you have only been waiting a very few minutes." |
| |
| "You spoke to my coachman, then?" |
| |
| "No, it was the candle on the side-table that told me. Pray resume your |
| seat and let me know how I can serve you." |
| |
| "My name is Doctor Percy Trevelyan," said our visitor, "and I live at |
| 403 Brook Street." |
| |
| "Are you not the author of a monograph upon obscure nervous lesions?" I |
| asked. |
| |
| His pale cheeks flushed with pleasure at hearing that his work was known |
| to me. |
| |
| "I so seldom hear of the work that I thought it was quite dead," said |
| he. "My publishers gave me a most discouraging account of its sale. You |
| are yourself, I presume, a medical man?" |
| |
| "A retired army surgeon." |
| |
| "My own hobby has always been nervous disease. I should wish to make it |
| an absolute specialty, but, of course, a man must take what he can get |
| at first. This, however, is beside the question, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, |
| and I quite appreciate how valuable your time is. The fact is that a |
| very singular train of events has occurred recently at my house in Brook |
| Street, and to-night they came to such a head that I felt it was quite |
| impossible for me to wait another hour before asking for your advice and |
| assistance." |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes sat down and lit his pipe. "You are very welcome |
| to both," said he. "Pray let me have a detailed account of what the |
| circumstances are which have disturbed you." |
| |
| "One or two of them are so trivial," said Dr. Trevelyan, "that really |
| I am almost ashamed to mention them. But the matter is so inexplicable, |
| and the recent turn which it has taken is so elaborate, that I shall |
| lay it all before you, and you shall judge what is essential and what is |
| not. |
| |
| "I am compelled, to begin with, to say something of my own college |
| career. I am a London University man, you know, and I am sure that your |
| will not think that I am unduly singing my own praises if I say that my |
| student career was considered by my professors to be a very promising |
| one. After I had graduated I continued to devote myself to research, |
| occupying a minor position in King's College Hospital, and I was |
| fortunate enough to excite considerable interest by my research into the |
| pathology of catalepsy, and finally to win the Bruce Pinkerton prize and |
| medal by the monograph on nervous lesions to which your friend has |
| just alluded. I should not go too far if I were to say that there was a |
| general impression at that time that a distinguished career lay before |
| me. |
| |
| "But the one great stumbling-block lay in my want of capital. As you |
| will readily understand, a specialist who aims high is compelled to |
| start in one of a dozen streets in the Cavendish Square quarter, all |
| of which entail enormous rents and furnishing expenses. Besides this |
| preliminary outlay, he must be prepared to keep himself for some years, |
| and to hire a presentable carriage and horse. To do this was quite |
| beyond my power, and I could only hope that by economy I might in ten |
| years' time save enough to enable me to put up my plate. Suddenly, |
| however, an unexpected incident opened up quite a new prospect to me. |
| |
| "This was a visit from a gentleman of the name of Blessington, who was a |
| complete stranger to me. He came up to my room one morning, and plunged |
| into business in an instant. |
| |
| "'You are the same Percy Trevelyan who has had so distinguished a career |
| and won a great prize lately?' said he. |
| |
| "I bowed. |
| |
| "'Answer me frankly,' he continued, 'for you will find it to your |
| interest to do so. You have all the cleverness which makes a successful |
| man. Have you the tact?' |
| |
| "I could not help smiling at the abruptness of the question. |
| |
| "'I trust that I have my share,' I said. |
| |
| "'Any bad habits? Not drawn towards drink, eh?' |
| |
| "'Really, sir!' I cried. |
| |
| "'Quite right! That's all right! But I was bound to ask. With all these |
| qualities, why are you not in practice?' |
| |
| "I shrugged my shoulders. |
| |
| "'Come, come!' said he, in his bustling way. 'It's the old story. More |
| in your brains than in your pocket, eh? What would you say if I were to |
| start you in Brook Street?' |
| |
| "I stared at him in astonishment. |
| |
| "'Oh, it's for my sake, not for yours,' he cried. 'I'll be perfectly |
| frank with you, and if it suits you it will suit me very well. I have a |
| few thousands to invest, d'ye see, and I think I'll sink them in you.' |
| |
| "'But why?' I gasped. |
| |
| "'Well, it's just like any other speculation, and safer than most.' |
| |
| "'What am I to do, then?' |
| |
| "'I'll tell you. I'll take the house, furnish it, pay the maids, and run |
| the whole place. All you have to do is just to wear out your chair in |
| the consulting-room. I'll let you have pocket-money and everything. Then |
| you hand over to me three quarters of what you earn, and you keep the |
| other quarter for yourself.' |
| |
| "This was the strange proposal, Mr. Holmes, with which the man |
| Blessington approached me. I won't weary you with the account of how |
| we bargained and negotiated. It ended in my moving into the house next |
| Lady-day, and starting in practice on very much the same conditions as |
| he had suggested. He came himself to live with me in the character of a |
| resident patient. His heart was weak, it appears, and he needed constant |
| medical supervision. He turned the two best rooms of the first floor |
| into a sitting-room and bedroom for himself. He was a man of singular |
| habits, shunning company and very seldom going out. His life was |
| irregular, but in one respect he was regularity itself. Every evening, |
| at the same hour, he walked into the consulting-room, examined the |
| books, put down five and three-pence for every guinea that I had earned, |
| and carried the rest off to the strong-box in his own room. |
| |
| "I may say with confidence that he never had occasion to regret his |
| speculation. From the first it was a success. A few good cases and the |
| reputation which I had won in the hospital brought me rapidly to the |
| front, and during the last few years I have made him a rich man. |
| |
| "So much, Mr. Holmes, for my past history and my relations with Mr. |
| Blessington. It only remains for me now to tell you what has occurred to |
| bring me here to-night. |
| |
| "Some weeks ago Mr. Blessington came down to me in, as it seemed to me, |
| a state of considerable agitation. He spoke of some burglary which, he |
| said, had been committed in the West End, and he appeared, I remember, |
| to be quite unnecessarily excited about it, declaring that a day should |
| not pass before we should add stronger bolts to our windows and doors. |
| For a week he continued to be in a peculiar state of restlessness, |
| peering continually out of the windows, and ceasing to take the short |
| walk which had usually been the prelude to his dinner. From his manner |
| it struck me that he was in mortal dread of something or somebody, but |
| when I questioned him upon the point he became so offensive that I was |
| compelled to drop the subject. Gradually, as time passed, his fears |
| appeared to die away, and he had renewed his former habits, when a fresh |
| event reduced him to the pitiable state of prostration in which he now |
| lies. |
| |
| "What happened was this. Two days ago I received the letter which I now |
| read to you. Neither address nor date is attached to it. |
| |
| "'A Russian nobleman who is now resident in England,' it runs, 'would |
| be glad to avail himself of the professional assistance of Dr. Percy |
| Trevelyan. He has been for some years a victim to cataleptic attacks, on |
| which, as is well known, Dr. Trevelyan is an authority. He proposes to |
| call at about quarter past six to-morrow evening, if Dr. Trevelyan will |
| make it convenient to be at home.' |
| |
| "This letter interested me deeply, because the chief difficulty in the |
| study of catalepsy is the rareness of the disease. You may believe, |
| then, that I was in my consulting-room when, at the appointed hour, the |
| page showed in the patient. |
| |
| "He was an elderly man, thin, demure, and commonplace--by no means the |
| conception one forms of a Russian nobleman. I was much more struck by |
| the appearance of his companion. This was a tall young man, surprisingly |
| handsome, with a dark, fierce face, and the limbs and chest of a |
| Hercules. He had his hand under the other's arm as they entered, and |
| helped him to a chair with a tenderness which one would hardly have |
| expected from his appearance. |
| |
| "'You will excuse my coming in, doctor,' said he to me, speaking English |
| with a slight lisp. 'This is my father, and his health is a matter of |
| the most overwhelming importance to me.' |
| |
| "I was touched by this filial anxiety. 'You would, perhaps, care to |
| remain during the consultation?' said I. |
| |
| "'Not for the world,' he cried with a gesture of horror. 'It is more |
| painful to me than I can express. If I were to see my father in one of |
| these dreadful seizures I am convinced that I should never survive |
| it. My own nervous system is an exceptionally sensitive one. With your |
| permission, I will remain in the waiting-room while you go into my |
| father's case.' |
| |
| "To this, of course, I assented, and the young man withdrew. The patient |
| and I then plunged into a discussion of his case, of which I took |
| exhaustive notes. He was not remarkable for intelligence, and his |
| answers were frequently obscure, which I attributed to his limited |
| acquaintance with our language. Suddenly, however, as I sat writing, |
| he ceased to give any answer at all to my inquiries, and on my turning |
| towards him I was shocked to see that he was sitting bolt upright in his |
| chair, staring at me with a perfectly blank and rigid face. He was again |
| in the grip of his mysterious malady. |
| |
| "My first feeling, as I have just said, was one of pity and horror. |
| My second, I fear, was rather one of professional satisfaction. I made |
| notes of my patient's pulse and temperature, tested the rigidity of his |
| muscles, and examined his reflexes. There was nothing markedly abnormal |
| in any of these conditions, which harmonized with my former experiences. |
| I had obtained good results in such cases by the inhalation of nitrite |
| of amyl, and the present seemed an admirable opportunity of testing |
| its virtues. The bottle was downstairs in my laboratory, so leaving my |
| patient seated in his chair, I ran down to get it. There was some little |
| delay in finding it--five minutes, let us say--and then I returned. |
| Imagine my amazement to find the room empty and the patient gone. |
| |
| "Of course, my first act was to run into the waiting-room. The son had |
| gone also. The hall door had been closed, but not shut. My page who |
| admits patients is a new boy and by no means quick. He waits downstairs, |
| and runs up to show patients out when I ring the consulting-room bell. |
| He had heard nothing, and the affair remained a complete mystery. Mr. |
| Blessington came in from his walk shortly afterwards, but I did not say |
| anything to him upon the subject, for, to tell the truth, I have got in |
| the way of late of holding as little communication with him as possible. |
| |
| "Well, I never thought that I should see anything more of the Russian |
| and his son, so you can imagine my amazement when, at the very same hour |
| this evening, they both came marching into my consulting-room, just as |
| they had done before. |
| |
| "'I feel that I owe you a great many apologies for my abrupt departure |
| yesterday, doctor,' said my patient. |
| |
| "'I confess that I was very much surprised at it,' said I. |
| |
| "'Well, the fact is,' he remarked, 'that when I recover from these |
| attacks my mind is always very clouded as to all that has gone before. I |
| woke up in a strange room, as it seemed to me, and made my way out into |
| the street in a sort of dazed way when you were absent.' |
| |
| "'And I,' said the son, 'seeing my father pass the door of the |
| waiting-room, naturally thought that the consultation had come to an |
| end. It was not until we had reached home that I began to realize the |
| true state of affairs.' |
| |
| "'Well,' said I, laughing, 'there is no harm done except that you |
| puzzled me terribly; so if you, sir, would kindly step into the |
| waiting-room I shall be happy to continue our consultation which was |
| brought to so abrupt an ending.' |
| |
| "'For half an hour or so I discussed that old gentleman's symptoms with |
| him, and then, having prescribed for him, I saw him go off upon the arm |
| of his son. |
| |
| "I have told you that Mr. Blessington generally chose this hour of the |
| day for his exercise. He came in shortly afterwards and passed upstairs. |
| An instant later I heard him running down, and he burst into my |
| consulting-room like a man who is mad with panic. |
| |
| "'Who has been in my room?' he cried. |
| |
| "'No one,' said I. |
| |
| "'It's a lie! He yelled. 'Come up and look!' |
| |
| "I passed over the grossness of his language, as he seemed half out of |
| his mind with fear. When I went upstairs with him he pointed to several |
| footprints upon the light carpet. |
| |
| "'D'you mean to say those are mine?' he cried. |
| |
| "They were certainly very much larger than any which he could have made, |
| and were evidently quite fresh. It rained hard this afternoon, as you |
| know, and my patients were the only people who called. It must have been |
| the case, then, that the man in the waiting-room had, for some unknown |
| reason, while I was busy with the other, ascended to the room of my |
| resident patient. Nothing had been touched or taken, but there were the |
| footprints to prove that the intrusion was an undoubted fact. |
| |
| "Mr. Blessington seemed more excited over the matter than I should have |
| thought possible, though of course it was enough to disturb anybody's |
| peace of mind. He actually sat crying in an arm-chair, and I could |
| hardly get him to speak coherently. It was his suggestion that I should |
| come round to you, and of course I at once saw the propriety of it, |
| for certainly the incident is a very singular one, though he appears to |
| completely overrate its importance. If you would only come back with me |
| in my brougham, you would at least be able to soothe him, though I |
| can hardly hope that you will be able to explain this remarkable |
| occurrence." |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes had listened to this long narrative with an intentness |
| which showed me that his interest was keenly aroused. His face was as |
| impassive as ever, but his lids had drooped more heavily over his eyes, |
| and his smoke had curled up more thickly from his pipe to emphasize each |
| curious episode in the doctor's tale. As our visitor concluded, Holmes |
| sprang up without a word, handed me my hat, picked his own from the |
| table, and followed Dr. Trevelyan to the door. Within a quarter of an |
| hour we had been dropped at the door of the physician's residence |
| in Brook Street, one of those sombre, flat-faced houses which one |
| associates with a West-End practice. A small page admitted us, and we |
| began at once to ascend the broad, well-carpeted stair. |
| |
| But a singular interruption brought us to a standstill. The light at |
| the top was suddenly whisked out, and from the darkness came a reedy, |
| quivering voice. |
| |
| "I have a pistol," it cried. "I give you my word that I'll fire if you |
| come any nearer." |
| |
| "This really grows outrageous, Mr. Blessington," cried Dr. Trevelyan. |
| |
| "Oh, then it is you, doctor," said the voice, with a great heave of |
| relief. "But those other gentlemen, are they what they pretend to be?" |
| |
| We were conscious of a long scrutiny out of the darkness. |
| |
| "Yes, yes, it's all right," said the voice at last. "You can come up, |
| and I am sorry if my precautions have annoyed you." |
| |
| He relit the stair gas as he spoke, and we saw before us a |
| singular-looking man, whose appearance, as well as his voice, testified |
| to his jangled nerves. He was very fat, but had apparently at some time |
| been much fatter, so that the skin hung about his face in loose pouches, |
| like the cheeks of a blood-hound. He was of a sickly color, and his |
| thin, sandy hair seemed to bristle up with the intensity of his emotion. |
| In his hand he held a pistol, but he thrust it into his pocket as we |
| advanced. |
| |
| "Good-evening, Mr. Holmes," said he. "I am sure I am very much obliged |
| to you for coming round. No one ever needed your advice more than I do. |
| I suppose that Dr. Trevelyan has told you of this most unwarrantable |
| intrusion into my rooms." |
| |
| "Quite so," said Holmes. "Who are these two men Mr. Blessington, and why |
| do they wish to molest you?" |
| |
| "Well, well," said the resident patient, in a nervous fashion, "of |
| course it is hard to say that. You can hardly expect me to answer that, |
| Mr. Holmes." |
| |
| "Do you mean that you don't know?" |
| |
| "Come in here, if you please. Just have the kindness to step in here." |
| |
| He led the way into his bedroom, which was large and comfortably |
| furnished. |
| |
| "You see that," said he, pointing to a big black box at the end of his |
| bed. "I have never been a very rich man, Mr. Holmes--never made but |
| one investment in my life, as Dr. Trevelyan would tell you. But I don't |
| believe in bankers. I would never trust a banker, Mr. Holmes. Between |
| ourselves, what little I have is in that box, so you can understand what |
| it means to me when unknown people force themselves into my rooms." |
| |
| Holmes looked at Blessington in his questioning way and shook his head. |
| |
| "I cannot possibly advise you if you try to deceive me," said he. |
| |
| "But I have told you everything." |
| |
| Holmes turned on his heel with a gesture of disgust. "Good-night, Dr. |
| Trevelyan," said he. |
| |
| "And no advice for me?" cried Blessington, in a breaking voice. |
| |
| "My advice to you, sir, is to speak the truth." |
| |
| A minute later we were in the street and walking for home. We had |
| crossed Oxford Street and were half way down Harley Street before I |
| could get a word from my companion. |
| |
| "Sorry to bring you out on such a fool's errand, Watson," he said at |
| last. "It is an interesting case, too, at the bottom of it." |
| |
| "I can make little of it," I confessed. |
| |
| "Well, it is quite evident that there are two men--more, perhaps, but |
| at least two--who are determined for some reason to get at this fellow |
| Blessington. I have no doubt in my mind that both on the first and on |
| the second occasion that young man penetrated to Blessington's room, |
| while his confederate, by an ingenious device, kept the doctor from |
| interfering." |
| |
| "And the catalepsy?" |
| |
| "A fraudulent imitation, Watson, though I should hardly dare to hint as |
| much to our specialist. It is a very easy complaint to imitate. I have |
| done it myself." |
| |
| "And then?" |
| |
| "By the purest chance Blessington was out on each occasion. Their reason |
| for choosing so unusual an hour for a consultation was obviously to |
| insure that there should be no other patient in the waiting-room. It |
| just happened, however, that this hour coincided with Blessington's |
| constitutional, which seems to show that they were not very well |
| acquainted with his daily routine. Of course, if they had been merely |
| after plunder they would at least have made some attempt to search for |
| it. Besides, I can read in a man's eye when it is his own skin that he |
| is frightened for. It is inconceivable that this fellow could have made |
| two such vindictive enemies as these appear to be without knowing of it. |
| I hold it, therefore, to be certain that he does know who these men are, |
| and that for reasons of his own he suppresses it. It is just possible |
| that to-morrow may find him in a more communicative mood." |
| |
| "Is there not one alternative," I suggested, "grotesquely improbably, |
| no doubt, but still just conceivable? Might the whole story of the |
| cataleptic Russian and his son be a concoction of Dr. Trevelyan's, who |
| has, for his own purposes, been in Blessington's rooms?" |
| |
| I saw in the gaslight that Holmes wore an amused smile at this brilliant |
| departure of mine. |
| |
| "My dear fellow," said he, "it was one of the first solutions which |
| occurred to me, but I was soon able to corroborate the doctor's tale. |
| This young man has left prints upon the stair-carpet which made it quite |
| superfluous for me to ask to see those which he had made in the room. |
| When I tell you that his shoes were square-toed instead of being pointed |
| like Blessington's, and were quite an inch and a third longer than the |
| doctor's, you will acknowledge that there can be no doubt as to his |
| individuality. But we may sleep on it now, for I shall be surprised if |
| we do not hear something further from Brook Street in the morning." |
| |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes's prophecy was soon fulfilled, and in a dramatic |
| fashion. At half-past seven next morning, in the first glimmer of |
| daylight, I found him standing by my bedside in his dressing-gown. |
| |
| "There's a brougham waiting for us, Watson," said he. |
| |
| "What's the matter, then?" |
| |
| "The Brook Street business." |
| |
| "Any fresh news?" |
| |
| "Tragic, but ambiguous," said he, pulling up the blind. "Look at this--a |
| sheet from a note-book, with 'For God's sake come at once--P. T.,' |
| scrawled upon it in pencil. Our friend, the doctor, was hard put to |
| it when he wrote this. Come along, my dear fellow, for it's an urgent |
| call." |
| |
| In a quarter of an hour or so we were back at the physician's house. He |
| came running out to meet us with a face of horror. |
| |
| "Oh, such a business!" he cried, with his hands to his temples. |
| |
| "What then?" |
| |
| "Blessington has committed suicide!" |
| |
| Holmes whistled. |
| |
| "Yes, he hanged himself during the night." |
| |
| We had entered, and the doctor had preceded us into what was evidently |
| his waiting-room. |
| |
| "I really hardly know what I am doing," he cried. "The police are |
| already upstairs. It has shaken me most dreadfully." |
| |
| "When did you find it out?" |
| |
| "He has a cup of tea taken in to him early every morning. When the maid |
| entered, about seven, there the unfortunate fellow was hanging in the |
| middle of the room. He had tied his cord to the hook on which the heavy |
| lamp used to hang, and he had jumped off from the top of the very box |
| that he showed us yesterday." |
| |
| Holmes stood for a moment in deep thought. |
| |
| "With your permission," said he at last, "I should like to go upstairs |
| and look into the matter." |
| |
| We both ascended, followed by the doctor. |
| |
| It was a dreadful sight which met us as we entered the bedroom door. I |
| have spoken of the impression of flabbiness which this man Blessington |
| conveyed. As he dangled from the hook it was exaggerated and intensified |
| until he was scarce human in his appearance. The neck was drawn out |
| like a plucked chicken's, making the rest of him seem the more obese and |
| unnatural by the contrast. He was clad only in his long night-dress, and |
| his swollen ankles and ungainly feet protruded starkly from beneath it. |
| Beside him stood a smart-looking police-inspector, who was taking notes |
| in a pocket-book. |
| |
| "Ah, Mr. Holmes," said he, heartily, as my friend entered, "I am |
| delighted to see you." |
| |
| "Good-morning, Lanner," answered Holmes; "you won't think me an |
| intruder, I am sure. Have you heard of the events which led up to this |
| affair?" |
| |
| "Yes, I heard something of them." |
| |
| "Have you formed any opinion?" |
| |
| "As far as I can see, the man has been driven out of his senses by |
| fright. The bed has been well slept in, you see. There's his impression |
| deep enough. It's about five in the morning, you know, that suicides are |
| most common. That would be about his time for hanging himself. It seems |
| to have been a very deliberate affair." |
| |
| "I should say that he has been dead about three hours, judging by the |
| rigidity of the muscles," said I. |
| |
| "Noticed anything peculiar about the room?" asked Holmes. |
| |
| "Found a screw-driver and some screws on the wash-hand stand. Seems to |
| have smoked heavily during the night, too. Here are four cigar-ends that |
| I picked out of the fireplace." |
| |
| "Hum!" said Holmes, "have you got his cigar-holder?" |
| |
| "No, I have seen none." |
| |
| "His cigar-case, then?" |
| |
| "Yes, it was in his coat-pocket." |
| |
| Holmes opened it and smelled the single cigar which it contained. |
| |
| "Oh, this is an Havana, and these others are cigars of the peculiar sort |
| which are imported by the Dutch from their East Indian colonies. They |
| are usually wrapped in straw, you know, and are thinner for their length |
| than any other brand." He picked up the four ends and examined them with |
| his pocket-lens. |
| |
| "Two of these have been smoked from a holder and two without," said he. |
| "Two have been cut by a not very sharp knife, and two have had the ends |
| bitten off by a set of excellent teeth. This is no suicide, Mr. Lanner. |
| It is a very deeply planned and cold-blooded murder." |
| |
| "Impossible!" cried the inspector. |
| |
| "And why?" |
| |
| "Why should any one murder a man in so clumsy a fashion as by hanging |
| him?" |
| |
| "That is what we have to find out." |
| |
| "How could they get in?" |
| |
| "Through the front door." |
| |
| "It was barred in the morning." |
| |
| "Then it was barred after them." |
| |
| "How do you know?" |
| |
| "I saw their traces. Excuse me a moment, and I may be able to give you |
| some further information about it." |
| |
| He went over to the door, and turning the lock he examined it in his |
| methodical way. Then he took out the key, which was on the inside, and |
| inspected that also. The bed, the carpet, the chairs the mantelpiece, |
| the dead body, and the rope were each in turn examined, until at last he |
| professed himself satisfied, and with my aid and that of the inspector |
| cut down the wretched object and laid it reverently under a sheet. |
| |
| "How about this rope?" he asked. |
| |
| "It is cut off this," said Dr. Trevelyan, drawing a large coil from |
| under the bed. "He was morbidly nervous of fire, and always kept this |
| beside him, so that he might escape by the window in case the stairs |
| were burning." |
| |
| "That must have saved them trouble," said Holmes, thoughtfully. "Yes, |
| the actual facts are very plain, and I shall be surprised if by the |
| afternoon I cannot give you the reasons for them as well. I will take |
| this photograph of Blessington, which I see upon the mantelpiece, as it |
| may help me in my inquiries." |
| |
| "But you have told us nothing!" cried the doctor. |
| |
| "Oh, there can be no doubt as to the sequence of events," said Holmes. |
| "There were three of them in it: the young man, the old man, and a |
| third, to whose identity I have no clue. The first two, I need hardly |
| remark, are the same who masqueraded as the Russian count and his son, |
| so we can give a very full description of them. They were admitted by |
| a confederate inside the house. If I might offer you a word of advice, |
| Inspector, it would be to arrest the page, who, as I understand, has |
| only recently come into your service, Doctor." |
| |
| "The young imp cannot be found," said Dr. Trevelyan; "the maid and the |
| cook have just been searching for him." |
| |
| Holmes shrugged his shoulders. |
| |
| "He has played a not unimportant part in this drama," said he. "The |
| three men having ascended the stairs, which they did on tiptoe, the |
| elder man first, the younger man second, and the unknown man in the |
| rear--" |
| |
| "My dear Holmes!" I ejaculated. |
| |
| "Oh, there could be no question as to the superimposing of the |
| footmarks. I had the advantage of learning which was which last night. |
| They ascended, then, to Mr. Blessington's room, the door of which they |
| found to be locked. With the help of a wire, however, they forced round |
| the key. Even without the lens you will perceive, by the scratches on |
| this ward, where the pressure was applied. |
| |
| "On entering the room their first proceeding must have been to gag Mr. |
| Blessington. He may have been asleep, or he may have been so paralyzed |
| with terror as to have been unable to cry out. These walls are thick, |
| and it is conceivable that his shriek, if he had time to utter one, was |
| unheard. |
| |
| "Having secured him, it is evident to me that a consultation of some |
| sort was held. Probably it was something in the nature of a judicial |
| proceeding. It must have lasted for some time, for it was then that |
| these cigars were smoked. The older man sat in that wicker chair; it |
| was he who used the cigar-holder. The younger man sat over yonder; he |
| knocked his ash off against the chest of drawers. The third fellow paced |
| up and down. Blessington, I think, sat upright in the bed, but of that I |
| cannot be absolutely certain. |
| |
| "Well, it ended by their taking Blessington and hanging him. The matter |
| was so prearranged that it is my belief that they brought with them |
| some sort of block or pulley which might serve as a gallows. That |
| screw-driver and those screws were, as I conceive, for fixing it up. |
| Seeing the hook, however they naturally saved themselves the trouble. |
| Having finished their work they made off, and the door was barred behind |
| them by their confederate." |
| |
| We had all listened with the deepest interest to this sketch of the |
| night's doings, which Holmes had deduced from signs so subtle and minute |
| that, even when he had pointed them out to us, we could scarcely follow |
| him in his reasoning. The inspector hurried away on the instant to make |
| inquiries about the page, while Holmes and I returned to Baker Street |
| for breakfast. |
| |
| "I'll be back by three," said he, when we had finished our meal. "Both |
| the inspector and the doctor will meet me here at that hour, and I hope |
| by that time to have cleared up any little obscurity which the case may |
| still present." |
| |
| |
| Our visitors arrived at the appointed time, but it was a quarter to |
| four before my friend put in an appearance. From his expression as he |
| entered, however, I could see that all had gone well with him. |
| |
| "Any news, Inspector?" |
| |
| "We have got the boy, sir." |
| |
| "Excellent, and I have got the men." |
| |
| "You have got them!" we cried, all three. |
| |
| "Well, at least I have got their identity. This so-called Blessington |
| is, as I expected, well known at headquarters, and so are his |
| assailants. Their names are Biddle, Hayward, and Moffat." |
| |
| "The Worthingdon bank gang," cried the inspector. |
| |
| "Precisely," said Holmes. |
| |
| "Then Blessington must have been Sutton." |
| |
| "Exactly," said Holmes. |
| |
| "Why, that makes it as clear as crystal," said the inspector. |
| |
| But Trevelyan and I looked at each other in bewilderment. |
| |
| "You must surely remember the great Worthingdon bank business," said |
| Holmes. "Five men were in it--these four and a fifth called Cartwright. |
| Tobin, the care-taker, was murdered, and the thieves got away with seven |
| thousand pounds. This was in 1875. They were all five arrested, but the |
| evidence against them was by no means conclusive. This Blessington or |
| Sutton, who was the worst of the gang, turned informer. On his evidence |
| Cartwright was hanged and the other three got fifteen years apiece. When |
| they got out the other day, which was some years before their full term, |
| they set themselves, as you perceive, to hunt down the traitor and to |
| avenge the death of their comrade upon him. Twice they tried to get at |
| him and failed; a third time, you see, it came off. Is there anything |
| further which I can explain, Dr. Trevelyan?" |
| |
| "I think you have made it all remarkable clear," said the doctor. "No |
| doubt the day on which he was perturbed was the day when he had seen of |
| their release in the newspapers." |
| |
| "Quite so. His talk about a burglary was the merest blind." |
| |
| "But why could he not tell you this?" |
| |
| "Well, my dear sir, knowing the vindictive character of his old |
| associates, he was trying to hide his own identity from everybody as |
| long as he could. His secret was a shameful one, and he could not bring |
| himself to divulge it. However, wretch as he was, he was still living |
| under the shield of British law, and I have no doubt, Inspector, that |
| you will see that, though that shield may fail to guard, the sword of |
| justice is still there to avenge." |
| |
| |
| Such were the singular circumstances in connection with the Resident |
| Patient and the Brook Street Doctor. From that night nothing has |
| been seen of the three murderers by the police, and it is surmised |
| at Scotland Yard that they were among the passengers of the ill-fated |
| steamer Norah Creina, which was lost some years ago with all hands |
| upon the Portuguese coast, some leagues to the north of Oporto. The |
| proceedings against the page broke down for want of evidence, and the |
| Brook Street Mystery, as it was called, has never until now been fully |
| dealt with in any public print. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure IX. The Greek Interpreter |
| |
| |
| During my long and intimate acquaintance with Mr. Sherlock Holmes I had |
| never heard him refer to his relations, and hardly ever to his own early |
| life. This reticence upon his part had increased the somewhat inhuman |
| effect which he produced upon me, until sometimes I found myself |
| regarding him as an isolated phenomenon, a brain without a heart, as |
| deficient in human sympathy as he was pre-eminent in intelligence. His |
| aversion to women and his disinclination to form new friendships were |
| both typical of his unemotional character, but not more so than his |
| complete suppression of every reference to his own people. I had come to |
| believe that he was an orphan with no relatives living, but one day, to |
| my very great surprise, he began to talk to me about his brother. |
| |
| It was after tea on a summer evening, and the conversation, which had |
| roamed in a desultory, spasmodic fashion from golf clubs to the causes |
| of the change in the obliquity of the ecliptic, came round at last |
| to the question of atavism and hereditary aptitudes. The point under |
| discussion was, how far any singular gift in an individual was due to |
| his ancestry and how far to his own early training. |
| |
| "In your own case," said I, "from all that you have told me, it seems |
| obvious that your faculty of observation and your peculiar facility for |
| deduction are due to your own systematic training." |
| |
| "To some extent," he answered, thoughtfully. "My ancestors were country |
| squires, who appear to have led much the same life as is natural to |
| their class. But, none the less, my turn that way is in my veins, and |
| may have come with my grandmother, who was the sister of Vernet, the |
| French artist. Art in the blood is liable to take the strangest forms." |
| |
| "But how do you know that it is hereditary?" |
| |
| "Because my brother Mycroft possesses it in a larger degree than I do." |
| |
| This was news to me indeed. If there were another man with such singular |
| powers in England, how was it that neither police nor public had heard |
| of him? I put the question, with a hint that it was my companion's |
| modesty which made him acknowledge his brother as his superior. Holmes |
| laughed at my suggestion. |
| |
| "My dear Watson," said he, "I cannot agree with those who rank modesty |
| among the virtues. To the logician all things should be seen exactly as |
| they are, and to underestimate one's self is as much a departure from |
| truth as to exaggerate one's own powers. When I say, therefore, that |
| Mycroft has better powers of observation than I, you may take it that I |
| am speaking the exact and literal truth." |
| |
| "Is he your junior?" |
| |
| "Seven years my senior." |
| |
| "How comes it that he is unknown?" |
| |
| "Oh, he is very well known in his own circle." |
| |
| "Where, then?" |
| |
| "Well, in the Diogenes Club, for example." |
| |
| I had never heard of the institution, and my face must have proclaimed |
| as much, for Sherlock Holmes pulled out his watch. |
| |
| "The Diogenes Club is the queerest club in London, and Mycroft one of |
| the queerest men. He's always there from quarter to five to twenty to |
| eight. It's six now, so if you care for a stroll this beautiful evening |
| I shall be very happy to introduce you to two curiosities." |
| |
| Five minutes later we were in the street, walking towards Regent's |
| Circus. |
| |
| "You wonder," said my companion, "why it is that Mycroft does not use |
| his powers for detective work. He is incapable of it." |
| |
| "But I thought you said--" |
| |
| "I said that he was my superior in observation and deduction. If the |
| art of the detective began and ended in reasoning from an arm-chair, my |
| brother would be the greatest criminal agent that ever lived. But he has |
| no ambition and no energy. He will not even go out of his way to verify |
| his own solutions, and would rather be considered wrong than take the |
| trouble to prove himself right. Again and again I have taken a problem |
| to him, and have received an explanation which has afterwards proved to |
| be the correct one. And yet he was absolutely incapable of working out |
| the practical points which must be gone into before a case could be laid |
| before a judge or jury." |
| |
| "It is not his profession, then?" |
| |
| "By no means. What is to me a means of livelihood is to him the merest |
| hobby of a dilettante. He has an extraordinary faculty for figures, and |
| audits the books in some of the government departments. Mycroft lodges |
| in Pall Mall, and he walks round the corner into Whitehall every morning |
| and back every evening. From year's end to year's end he takes no other |
| exercise, and is seen nowhere else, except only in the Diogenes Club, |
| which is just opposite his rooms." |
| |
| "I cannot recall the name." |
| |
| "Very likely not. There are many men in London, you know, who, some from |
| shyness, some from misanthropy, have no wish for the company of their |
| fellows. Yet they are not averse to comfortable chairs and the latest |
| periodicals. It is for the convenience of these that the Diogenes Club |
| was started, and it now contains the most unsociable and unclubable men |
| in town. No member is permitted to take the least notice of any |
| other one. Save in the Stranger's Room, no talking is, under any |
| circumstances, allowed, and three offences, if brought to the notice of |
| the committee, render the talker liable to expulsion. My brother was one |
| of the founders, and I have myself found it a very soothing atmosphere." |
| |
| We had reached Pall Mall as we talked, and were walking down it from the |
| St. James's end. Sherlock Holmes stopped at a door some little distance |
| from the Carlton, and, cautioning me not to speak, he led the way into |
| the hall. Through the glass paneling I caught a glimpse of a large and |
| luxurious room, in which a considerable number of men were sitting about |
| and reading papers, each in his own little nook. Holmes showed me into a |
| small chamber which looked out into Pall Mall, and then, leaving me for |
| a minute, he came back with a companion whom I knew could only be his |
| brother. |
| |
| Mycroft Holmes was a much larger and stouter man than Sherlock. His body |
| was absolutely corpulent, but his face, though massive, had preserved |
| something of the sharpness of expression which was so remarkable in that |
| of his brother. His eyes, which were of a peculiarly light, watery gray, |
| seemed to always retain that far-away, introspective look which I had |
| only observed in Sherlock's when he was exerting his full powers. |
| |
| "I am glad to meet you, sir," said he, putting out a broad, fat hand |
| like the flipper of a seal. "I hear of Sherlock everywhere since you |
| became his chronicler. By the way, Sherlock, I expected to see you round |
| last week, to consult me over that Manor House case. I thought you might |
| be a little out of your depth." |
| |
| "No, I solved it," said my friend, smiling. |
| |
| "It was Adams, of course." |
| |
| "Yes, it was Adams." |
| |
| "I was sure of it from the first." The two sat down together in the |
| bow-window of the club. "To any one who wishes to study mankind this is |
| the spot," said Mycroft. "Look at the magnificent types! Look at these |
| two men who are coming towards us, for example." |
| |
| "The billiard-marker and the other?" |
| |
| "Precisely. What do you make of the other?" |
| |
| The two men had stopped opposite the window. Some chalk marks over the |
| waistcoat pocket were the only signs of billiards which I could see |
| in one of them. The other was a very small, dark fellow, with his hat |
| pushed back and several packages under his arm. |
| |
| "An old soldier, I perceive," said Sherlock. |
| |
| "And very recently discharged," remarked the brother. |
| |
| "Served in India, I see." |
| |
| "And a non-commissioned officer." |
| |
| "Royal Artillery, I fancy," said Sherlock. |
| |
| "And a widower." |
| |
| "But with a child." |
| |
| "Children, my dear boy, children." |
| |
| "Come," said I, laughing, "this is a little too much." |
| |
| "Surely," answered Holmes, "it is not hard to say that a man with that |
| bearing, expression of authority, and sunbaked skin, is a soldier, is |
| more than a private, and is not long from India." |
| |
| "That he has not left the service long is shown by his still wearing his |
| ammunition boots, as they are called," observed Mycroft. |
| |
| "He had not the cavalry stride, yet he wore his hat on one side, as |
| is shown by the lighter skin of that side of his brow. His weight is |
| against his being a sapper. He is in the artillery." |
| |
| "Then, of course, his complete mourning shows that he has lost some one |
| very dear. The fact that he is doing his own shopping looks as though |
| it were his wife. He has been buying things for children, you perceive. |
| There is a rattle, which shows that one of them is very young. The wife |
| probably died in childbed. The fact that he has a picture-book under his |
| arm shows that there is another child to be thought of." |
| |
| I began to understand what my friend meant when he said that his brother |
| possessed even keener faculties that he did himself. He glanced across |
| at me and smiled. Mycroft took snuff from a tortoise-shell box, and |
| brushed away the wandering grains from his coat front with a large, red |
| silk handkerchief. |
| |
| "By the way, Sherlock," said he, "I have had something quite after your |
| own heart--a most singular problem--submitted to my judgment. I really |
| had not the energy to follow it up save in a very incomplete fashion, |
| but it gave me a basis for some pleasing speculation. If you would care |
| to hear the facts--" |
| |
| "My dear Mycroft, I should be delighted." |
| |
| The brother scribbled a note upon a leaf of his pocket-book, and, |
| ringing the bell, he handed it to the waiter. |
| |
| "I have asked Mr. Melas to step across," said he. "He lodges on the |
| floor above me, and I have some slight acquaintance with him, which led |
| him to come to me in his perplexity. Mr. Melas is a Greek by extraction, |
| as I understand, and he is a remarkable linguist. He earns his living |
| partly as interpreter in the law courts and partly by acting as guide to |
| any wealthy Orientals who may visit the Northumberland Avenue hotels. I |
| think I will leave him to tell his very remarkable experience in his own |
| fashion." |
| |
| A few minutes later we were joined by a short, stout man whose olive |
| face and coal-black hair proclaimed his Southern origin, though his |
| speech was that of an educated Englishman. He shook hands eagerly |
| with Sherlock Holmes, and his dark eyes sparkled with pleasure when he |
| understood that the specialist was anxious to hear his story. |
| |
| "I do not believe that the police credit me--on my word, I do not," said |
| he in a wailing voice. "Just because they have never heard of it before, |
| they think that such a thing cannot be. But I know that I shall never |
| be easy in my mind until I know what has become of my poor man with the |
| sticking-plaster upon his face." |
| |
| "I am all attention," said Sherlock Holmes. |
| |
| "This is Wednesday evening," said Mr. Melas. "Well then, it was Monday |
| night--only two days ago, you understand--that all this happened. I am |
| an interpreter, as perhaps my neighbor there has told you. I interpret |
| all languages--or nearly all--but as I am a Greek by birth and with a |
| Grecian name, it is with that particular tongue that I am principally |
| associated. For many years I have been the chief Greek interpreter in |
| London, and my name is very well known in the hotels. |
| |
| "It happens not unfrequently that I am sent for at strange hours by |
| foreigners who get into difficulties, or by travelers who arrive late |
| and wish my services. I was not surprised, therefore, on Monday night |
| when a Mr. Latimer, a very fashionably dressed young man, came up to my |
| rooms and asked me to accompany him in a cab which was waiting at the |
| door. A Greek friend had come to see him upon business, he said, and |
| as he could speak nothing but his own tongue, the services of an |
| interpreter were indispensable. He gave me to understand that his house |
| was some little distance off, in Kensington, and he seemed to be in a |
| great hurry, bustling me rapidly into the cab when we had descended to |
| the street. |
| |
| "I say into the cab, but I soon became doubtful as to whether it was not |
| a carriage in which I found myself. It was certainly more roomy than |
| the ordinary four-wheeled disgrace to London, and the fittings, though |
| frayed, were of rich quality. Mr. Latimer seated himself opposite to me |
| and we started off through Charing Cross and up the Shaftesbury Avenue. |
| We had come out upon Oxford Street and I had ventured some remark as to |
| this being a roundabout way to Kensington, when my words were arrested |
| by the extraordinary conduct of my companion. |
| |
| "He began by drawing a most formidable-looking bludgeon loaded with lead |
| from his pocket, and switching it backward and forward several times, |
| as if to test its weight and strength. Then he placed it without a word |
| upon the seat beside him. Having done this, he drew up the windows on |
| each side, and I found to my astonishment that they were covered with |
| paper so as to prevent my seeing through them. |
| |
| "'I am sorry to cut off your view, Mr. Melas,' said he. 'The fact is |
| that I have no intention that you should see what the place is to which |
| we are driving. It might possibly be inconvenient to me if you could |
| find your way there again.' |
| |
| "As you can imagine, I was utterly taken aback by such an address. My |
| companion was a powerful, broad-shouldered young fellow, and, apart from |
| the weapon, I should not have had the slightest chance in a struggle |
| with him. |
| |
| "'This is very extraordinary conduct, Mr. Latimer,' I stammered. 'You |
| must be aware that what you are doing is quite illegal.' |
| |
| "'It is somewhat of a liberty, no doubt,' said he, 'but we'll make it |
| up to you. I must warn you, however, Mr. Melas, that if at any time |
| to-night you attempt to raise an alarm or do anything which is against |
| my interests, you will find it a very serious thing. I beg you to |
| remember that no one knows where you are, and that, whether you are in |
| this carriage or in my house, you are equally in my power.' |
| |
| "His words were quiet, but he had a rasping way of saying them which |
| was very menacing. I sat in silence wondering what on earth could be |
| his reason for kidnapping me in this extraordinary fashion. Whatever it |
| might be, it was perfectly clear that there was no possible use in my |
| resisting, and that I could only wait to see what might befall. |
| |
| "For nearly two hours we drove without my having the least clue as to |
| where we were going. Sometimes the rattle of the stones told of a paved |
| causeway, and at others our smooth, silent course suggested asphalt; |
| but, save by this variation in sound, there was nothing at all which |
| could in the remotest way help me to form a guess as to where we were. |
| The paper over each window was impenetrable to light, and a blue curtain |
| was drawn across the glass work in front. It was a quarter-past seven |
| when we left Pall Mall, and my watch showed me that it was ten minutes |
| to nine when we at last came to a standstill. My companion let down |
| the window, and I caught a glimpse of a low, arched doorway with a lamp |
| burning above it. As I was hurried from the carriage it swung open, and |
| I found myself inside the house, with a vague impression of a lawn |
| and trees on each side of me as I entered. Whether these were private |
| grounds, however, or bona-fide country was more than I could possibly |
| venture to say. |
| |
| "There was a colored gas-lamp inside which was turned so low that I |
| could see little save that the hall was of some size and hung with |
| pictures. In the dim light I could make out that the person who had |
| opened the door was a small, mean-looking, middle-aged man with rounded |
| shoulders. As he turned towards us the glint of the light showed me that |
| he was wearing glasses. |
| |
| "'Is this Mr. Melas, Harold?' said he. |
| |
| "'Yes.' |
| |
| "'Well done, well done! No ill-will, Mr. Melas, I hope, but we could not |
| get on without you. If you deal fair with us you'll not regret it, |
| but if you try any tricks, God help you!' He spoke in a nervous, jerky |
| fashion, and with little giggling laughs in between, but somehow he |
| impressed me with fear more than the other. |
| |
| "'What do you want with me?' I asked. |
| |
| "'Only to ask a few questions of a Greek gentleman who is visiting us, |
| and to let us have the answers. But say no more than you are told to |
| say, or--' here came the nervous giggle again--'you had better never |
| have been born.' |
| |
| "As he spoke he opened a door and showed the way into a room which |
| appeared to be very richly furnished, but again the only light was |
| afforded by a single lamp half-turned down. The chamber was certainly |
| large, and the way in which my feet sank into the carpet as I stepped |
| across it told me of its richness. I caught glimpses of velvet chairs, a |
| high white marble mantel-piece, and what seemed to be a suit of Japanese |
| armor at one side of it. There was a chair just under the lamp, and the |
| elderly man motioned that I should sit in it. The younger had left |
| us, but he suddenly returned through another door, leading with him |
| a gentleman clad in some sort of loose dressing-gown who moved slowly |
| towards us. As he came into the circle of dim light which enables me to |
| see him more clearly I was thrilled with horror at his appearance. He |
| was deadly pale and terribly emaciated, with the protruding, brilliant |
| eyes of a man whose spirit was greater than his strength. But what |
| shocked me more than any signs of physical weakness was that his face |
| was grotesquely criss-crossed with sticking-plaster, and that one large |
| pad of it was fastened over his mouth. |
| |
| "'Have you the slate, Harold?' cried the older man, as this strange |
| being fell rather than sat down into a chair. 'Are his hands loose? Now, |
| then, give him the pencil. You are to ask the questions, Mr. Melas, and |
| he will write the answers. Ask him first of all whether he is prepared |
| to sign the papers?' |
| |
| "The man's eyes flashed fire. |
| |
| "'Never!' he wrote in Greek upon the slate. |
| |
| "'On no condition?' I asked, at the bidding of our tyrant. |
| |
| "'Only if I see her married in my presence by a Greek priest whom I |
| know.' |
| |
| "The man giggled in his venomous way. |
| |
| "'You know what awaits you, then?' |
| |
| "'I care nothing for myself.' |
| |
| "These are samples of the questions and answers which made up our |
| strange half-spoken, half-written conversation. Again and again I had to |
| ask him whether he would give in and sign the documents. Again and again |
| I had the same indignant reply. But soon a happy thought came to me. I |
| took to adding on little sentences of my own to each question, innocent |
| ones at first, to test whether either of our companions knew anything |
| of the matter, and then, as I found that they showed no signs I played a |
| more dangerous game. Our conversation ran something like this: |
| |
| "'You can do no good by this obstinacy. Who are you?' |
| |
| "'I care not. I am a stranger in London.' |
| |
| "'Your fate will be upon your own head. How long have you been here?' |
| |
| "'Let it be so. Three weeks.' |
| |
| "'The property can never be yours. What ails you?' |
| |
| "'It shall not go to villains. They are starving me.' |
| |
| "'You shall go free if you sign. What house is this?' |
| |
| "'I will never sign. I do not know.' |
| |
| "'You are not doing her any service. What is your name?' |
| |
| "'Let me hear her say so. Kratides.' |
| |
| "'You shall see her if you sign. Where are you from?' |
| |
| "'Then I shall never see her. Athens.' |
| |
| "Another five minutes, Mr. Holmes, and I should have wormed out the |
| whole story under their very noses. My very next question might have |
| cleared the matter up, but at that instant the door opened and a woman |
| stepped into the room. I could not see her clearly enough to know more |
| than that she was tall and graceful, with black hair, and clad in some |
| sort of loose white gown. |
| |
| "'Harold,' said she, speaking English with a broken accent. 'I could not |
| stay away longer. It is so lonely up there with only--Oh, my God, it is |
| Paul!' |
| |
| "These last words were in Greek, and at the same instant the man with |
| a convulsive effort tore the plaster from his lips, and screaming out |
| 'Sophy! Sophy!' rushed into the woman's arms. Their embrace was but for |
| an instant, however, for the younger man seized the woman and pushed |
| her out of the room, while the elder easily overpowered his emaciated |
| victim, and dragged him away through the other door. For a moment I was |
| left alone in the room, and I sprang to my feet with some vague idea |
| that I might in some way get a clue to what this house was in which I |
| found myself. Fortunately, however, I took no steps, for looking up I |
| saw that the older man was standing in the door-way with his eyes fixed |
| upon me. |
| |
| "'That will do, Mr. Melas,' said he. 'You perceive that we have taken |
| you into our confidence over some very private business. We should not |
| have troubled you, only that our friend who speaks Greek and who began |
| these negotiations has been forced to return to the East. It was |
| quite necessary for us to find some one to take his place, and we were |
| fortunate in hearing of your powers.' |
| |
| "I bowed. |
| |
| "'There are five sovereigns here,' said he, walking up to me, 'which |
| will, I hope, be a sufficient fee. But remember,' he added, tapping me |
| lightly on the chest and giggling, 'if you speak to a human soul about |
| this--one human soul, mind--well, may God have mercy upon your soul!" |
| |
| "I cannot tell you the loathing and horror with which this |
| insignificant-looking man inspired me. I could see him better now as the |
| lamp-light shone upon him. His features were peaky and sallow, and his |
| little pointed beard was thready and ill-nourished. He pushed his face |
| forward as he spoke and his lips and eyelids were continually twitching |
| like a man with St. Vitus's dance. I could not help thinking that his |
| strange, catchy little laugh was also a symptom of some nervous malady. |
| The terror of his face lay in his eyes, however, steel gray, and |
| glistening coldly with a malignant, inexorable cruelty in their depths. |
| |
| "'We shall know if you speak of this,' said he. 'We have our own means |
| of information. Now you will find the carriage waiting, and my friend |
| will see you on your way.' |
| |
| "I was hurried through the hall and into the vehicle, again obtaining |
| that momentary glimpse of trees and a garden. Mr. Latimer followed |
| closely at my heels, and took his place opposite to me without a word. |
| In silence we again drove for an interminable distance with the windows |
| raised, until at last, just after midnight, the carriage pulled up. |
| |
| "'You will get down here, Mr. Melas,' said my companion. 'I am sorry |
| to leave you so far from your house, but there is no alternative. Any |
| attempt upon your part to follow the carriage can only end in injury to |
| yourself.' |
| |
| "He opened the door as he spoke, and I had hardly time to spring out |
| when the coachman lashed the horse and the carriage rattled away. I |
| looked around me in astonishment. I was on some sort of a heathy common |
| mottled over with dark clumps of furze-bushes. Far away stretched a |
| line of houses, with a light here and there in the upper windows. On the |
| other side I saw the red signal-lamps of a railway. |
| |
| "The carriage which had brought me was already out of sight. I stood |
| gazing round and wondering where on earth I might be, when I saw some |
| one coming towards me in the darkness. As he came up to me I made out |
| that he was a railway porter. |
| |
| "'Can you tell me what place this is?' I asked. |
| |
| "'Wandsworth Common,' said he. |
| |
| "'Can I get a train into town?' |
| |
| "'If you walk on a mile or so to Clapham Junction,' said he, 'you'll |
| just be in time for the last to Victoria.' |
| |
| "So that was the end of my adventure, Mr. Holmes. I do not know where I |
| was, nor whom I spoke with, nor anything save what I have told you. But |
| I know that there is foul play going on, and I want to help that unhappy |
| man if I can. I told the whole story to Mr. Mycroft Holmes next morning, |
| and subsequently to the police." |
| |
| We all sat in silence for some little time after listening to this |
| extraordinary narrative. Then Sherlock looked across at his brother. |
| |
| "Any steps?" he asked. |
| |
| Mycroft picked up the Daily News, which was lying on the side-table. |
| |
| "'Anybody supplying any information to the whereabouts of a Greek |
| gentleman named Paul Kratides, from Athens, who is unable to speak |
| English, will be rewarded. A similar reward paid to any one giving |
| information about a Greek lady whose first name is Sophy. X 2473.' That |
| was in all the dailies. No answer." |
| |
| "How about the Greek Legation?" |
| |
| "I have inquired. They know nothing." |
| |
| "A wire to the head of the Athens police, then?" |
| |
| "Sherlock has all the energy of the family," said Mycroft, turning to |
| me. "Well, you take the case up by all means, and let me know if you do |
| any good." |
| |
| "Certainly," answered my friend, rising from his chair. "I'll let you |
| know, and Mr. Melas also. In the meantime, Mr. Melas, I should certainly |
| be on my guard, if I were you, for of course they must know through |
| these advertisements that you have betrayed them." |
| |
| As we walked home together, Holmes stopped at a telegraph office and |
| sent off several wires. |
| |
| "You see, Watson," he remarked, "our evening has been by no means |
| wasted. Some of my most interesting cases have come to me in this way |
| through Mycroft. The problem which we have just listened to, although |
| it can admit of but one explanation, has still some distinguishing |
| features." |
| |
| "You have hopes of solving it?" |
| |
| "Well, knowing as much as we do, it will be singular indeed if we fail |
| to discover the rest. You must yourself have formed some theory which |
| will explain the facts to which we have listened." |
| |
| "In a vague way, yes." |
| |
| "What was your idea, then?" |
| |
| "It seemed to me to be obvious that this Greek girl had been carried off |
| by the young Englishman named Harold Latimer." |
| |
| "Carried off from where?" |
| |
| "Athens, perhaps." |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes shook his head. "This young man could not talk a word of |
| Greek. The lady could talk English fairly well. Inference--that she had |
| been in England some little time, but he had not been in Greece." |
| |
| "Well, then, we will presume that she had come on a visit to England, |
| and that this Harold had persuaded her to fly with him." |
| |
| "That is more probable." |
| |
| "Then the brother--for that, I fancy, must be the relationship--comes |
| over from Greece to interfere. He imprudently puts himself into the |
| power of the young man and his older associate. They seize him and use |
| violence towards him in order to make him sign some papers to make over |
| the girl's fortune--of which he may be trustee--to them. This he refuses |
| to do. In order to negotiate with him they have to get an interpreter, |
| and they pitch upon this Mr. Melas, having used some other one before. |
| The girl is not told of the arrival of her brother, and finds it out by |
| the merest accident." |
| |
| "Excellent, Watson!" cried Holmes. "I really fancy that you are not far |
| from the truth. You see that we hold all the cards, and we have only to |
| fear some sudden act of violence on their part. If they give us time we |
| must have them." |
| |
| "But how can we find where this house lies?" |
| |
| "Well, if our conjecture is correct and the girl's name is or was Sophy |
| Kratides, we should have no difficulty in tracing her. That must be our |
| main hope, for the brother is, of course, a complete stranger. It is |
| clear that some time has elapsed since this Harold established these |
| relations with the girl--some weeks, at any rate--since the brother in |
| Greece has had time to hear of it and come across. If they have been |
| living in the same place during this time, it is probable that we shall |
| have some answer to Mycroft's advertisement." |
| |
| We had reached our house in Baker Street while we had been talking. |
| Holmes ascended the stair first, and as he opened the door of our room |
| he gave a start of surprise. Looking over his shoulder, I was equally |
| astonished. His brother Mycroft was sitting smoking in the arm-chair. |
| |
| "Come in, Sherlock! Come in, sir," said he blandly, smiling at our |
| surprised faces. "You don't expect such energy from me, do you, |
| Sherlock? But somehow this case attracts me." |
| |
| "How did you get here?" |
| |
| "I passed you in a hansom." |
| |
| "There has been some new development?" |
| |
| "I had an answer to my advertisement." |
| |
| "Ah!" |
| |
| "Yes, it came within a few minutes of your leaving." |
| |
| "And to what effect?" |
| |
| Mycroft Holmes took out a sheet of paper. |
| |
| "Here it is," said he, "written with a J pen on royal cream paper by a |
| middle-aged man with a weak constitution. 'Sir,' he says, 'in answer to |
| your advertisement of to-day's date, I beg to inform you that I know the |
| young lady in question very well. If you should care to call upon me I |
| could give you some particulars as to her painful history. She is living |
| at present at The Myrtles, Beckenham. Yours faithfully, J. Davenport.' |
| |
| "He writes from Lower Brixton," said Mycroft Holmes. "Do you not think |
| that we might drive to him now, Sherlock, and learn these particulars?" |
| |
| "My dear Mycroft, the brother's life is more valuable than the sister's |
| story. I think we should call at Scotland Yard for Inspector Gregson, |
| and go straight out to Beckenham. We know that a man is being done to |
| death, and every hour may be vital." |
| |
| "Better pick up Mr. Melas on our way," I suggested. "We may need an |
| interpreter." |
| |
| "Excellent," said Sherlock Holmes. "Send the boy for a four-wheeler, and |
| we shall be off at once." He opened the table-drawer as he spoke, and I |
| noticed that he slipped his revolver into his pocket. "Yes," said he, in |
| answer to my glance; "I should say from what we have heard, that we are |
| dealing with a particularly dangerous gang." |
| |
| It was almost dark before we found ourselves in Pall Mall, at the rooms |
| of Mr. Melas. A gentleman had just called for him, and he was gone. |
| |
| "Can you tell me where?" asked Mycroft Holmes. |
| |
| "I don't know, sir," answered the woman who had opened the door; "I only |
| know that he drove away with the gentleman in a carriage." |
| |
| "Did the gentleman give a name?" |
| |
| "No, sir." |
| |
| "He wasn't a tall, handsome, dark young man?" |
| |
| "Oh, no, sir. He was a little gentleman, with glasses, thin in the face, |
| but very pleasant in his ways, for he was laughing all the time that he |
| was talking." |
| |
| "Come along!" cried Sherlock Holmes, abruptly. "This grows serious," |
| he observed, as we drove to Scotland Yard. "These men have got hold of |
| Melas again. He is a man of no physical courage, as they are well |
| aware from their experience the other night. This villain was able to |
| terrorize him the instant that he got into his presence. No doubt |
| they want his professional services, but, having used him, they may be |
| inclined to punish him for what they will regard as his treachery." |
| |
| Our hope was that, by taking train, we might get to Beckenham as soon |
| or sooner than the carriage. On reaching Scotland Yard, however, it was |
| more than an hour before we could get Inspector Gregson and comply with |
| the legal formalities which would enable us to enter the house. It was a |
| quarter to ten before we reached London Bridge, and half past before the |
| four of us alighted on the Beckenham platform. A drive of half a mile |
| brought us to The Myrtles--a large, dark house standing back from the |
| road in its own grounds. Here we dismissed our cab, and made our way up |
| the drive together. |
| |
| "The windows are all dark," remarked the inspector. "The house seems |
| deserted." |
| |
| "Our birds are flown and the nest empty," said Holmes. |
| |
| "Why do you say so?" |
| |
| "A carriage heavily loaded with luggage has passed out during the last |
| hour." |
| |
| The inspector laughed. "I saw the wheel-tracks in the light of the |
| gate-lamp, but where does the luggage come in?" |
| |
| "You may have observed the same wheel-tracks going the other way. But |
| the outward-bound ones were very much deeper--so much so that we can |
| say for a certainty that there was a very considerable weight on the |
| carriage." |
| |
| "You get a trifle beyond me there," said the inspector, shrugging his |
| shoulder. "It will not be an easy door to force, but we will try if we |
| cannot make some one hear us." |
| |
| He hammered loudly at the knocker and pulled at the bell, but without |
| any success. Holmes had slipped away, but he came back in a few minutes. |
| |
| "I have a window open," said he. |
| |
| "It is a mercy that you are on the side of the force, and not against |
| it, Mr. Holmes," remarked the inspector, as he noted the clever way in |
| which my friend had forced back the catch. "Well, I think that under the |
| circumstances we may enter without an invitation." |
| |
| One after the other we made our way into a large apartment, which was |
| evidently that in which Mr. Melas had found himself. The inspector |
| had lit his lantern, and by its light we could see the two doors, the |
| curtain, the lamp, and the suit of Japanese mail as he had described |
| them. On the table lay two glasses, and empty brandy-bottle, and the |
| remains of a meal. |
| |
| "What is that?" asked Holmes, suddenly. |
| |
| We all stood still and listened. A low moaning sound was coming from |
| somewhere over our heads. Holmes rushed to the door and out into the |
| hall. The dismal noise came from upstairs. He dashed up, the inspector |
| and I at his heels, while his brother Mycroft followed as quickly as his |
| great bulk would permit. |
| |
| Three doors faced up upon the second floor, and it was from the central |
| of these that the sinister sounds were issuing, sinking sometimes into a |
| dull mumble and rising again into a shrill whine. It was locked, but the |
| key had been left on the outside. Holmes flung open the door and rushed |
| in, but he was out again in an instant, with his hand to his throat. |
| |
| "It's charcoal," he cried. "Give it time. It will clear." |
| |
| Peering in, we could see that the only light in the room came from a |
| dull blue flame which flickered from a small brass tripod in the centre. |
| It threw a livid, unnatural circle upon the floor, while in the shadows |
| beyond we saw the vague loom of two figures which crouched against the |
| wall. From the open door there reeked a horrible poisonous exhalation |
| which set us gasping and coughing. Holmes rushed to the top of the |
| stairs to draw in the fresh air, and then, dashing into the room, he |
| threw up the window and hurled the brazen tripod out into the garden. |
| |
| "We can enter in a minute," he gasped, darting out again. "Where is a |
| candle? I doubt if we could strike a match in that atmosphere. Hold the |
| light at the door and we shall get them out, Mycroft, now!" |
| |
| With a rush we got to the poisoned men and dragged them out into the |
| well-lit hall. Both of them were blue-lipped and insensible, with |
| swollen, congested faces and protruding eyes. Indeed, so distorted were |
| their features that, save for his black beard and stout figure, we might |
| have failed to recognize in one of them the Greek interpreter who had |
| parted from us only a few hours before at the Diogenes Club. His hands |
| and feet were securely strapped together, and he bore over one eye |
| the marks of a violent blow. The other, who was secured in a similar |
| fashion, was a tall man in the last stage of emaciation, with several |
| strips of sticking-plaster arranged in a grotesque pattern over his |
| face. He had ceased to moan as we laid him down, and a glance showed |
| me that for him at least our aid had come too late. Mr. Melas, however, |
| still lived, and in less than an hour, with the aid of ammonia and |
| brandy I had the satisfaction of seeing him open his eyes, and of |
| knowing that my hand had drawn him back from that dark valley in which |
| all paths meet. |
| |
| It was a simple story which he had to tell, and one which did but |
| confirm our own deductions. His visitor, on entering his rooms, had |
| drawn a life-preserver from his sleeve, and had so impressed him with |
| the fear of instant and inevitable death that he had kidnapped him for |
| the second time. Indeed, it was almost mesmeric, the effect which this |
| giggling ruffian had produced upon the unfortunate linguist, for he |
| could not speak of him save with trembling hands and a blanched cheek. |
| He had been taken swiftly to Beckenham, and had acted as interpreter in |
| a second interview, even more dramatic than the first, in which the two |
| Englishmen had menaced their prisoner with instant death if he did not |
| comply with their demands. Finally, finding him proof against every |
| threat, they had hurled him back into his prison, and after |
| reproaching Melas with his treachery, which appeared from the newspaper |
| advertisement, they had stunned him with a blow from a stick, and he |
| remembered nothing more until he found us bending over him. |
| |
| And this was the singular case of the Grecian Interpreter, the |
| explanation of which is still involved in some mystery. We were able |
| to find out, by communicating with the gentleman who had answered the |
| advertisement, that the unfortunate young lady came of a wealthy Grecian |
| family, and that she had been on a visit to some friends in England. |
| While there she had met a young man named Harold Latimer, who had |
| acquired an ascendancy over he and had eventually persuaded her to fly |
| with him. Her friends, shocked at the event, had contented themselves |
| with informing her brother at Athens, and had then washed their hands |
| of the matter. The brother, on his arrival in England, had imprudently |
| placed himself in the power of Latimer and of his associate, whose name |
| was Wilson Kemp--a man of the foulest antecedents. These two, finding |
| that through his ignorance of the language he was helpless in their |
| hands, had kept him a prisoner, and had endeavored by cruelty and |
| starvation to make him sign away his own and his sister's property. They |
| had kept him in the house without the girl's knowledge, and the plaster |
| over the face had been for the purpose of making recognition difficult |
| in case she should ever catch a glimpse of him. Her feminine perception, |
| however, had instantly seen through the disguise when, on the occasion |
| of the interpreter's visit, she had seen him for the first time. The |
| poor girl, however, was herself a prisoner, for there was no one about |
| the house except the man who acted as coachman, and his wife, both of |
| whom were tools of the conspirators. Finding that their secret was out, |
| and that their prisoner was not to be coerced, the two villains with the |
| girl had fled away at a few hours' notice from the furnished house which |
| they had hired, having first, as they thought, taken vengeance both upon |
| the man who had defied and the one who had betrayed them. |
| |
| Months afterwards a curious newspaper cutting reached us from |
| Buda-Pesth. It told how two Englishmen who had been traveling with a |
| woman had met with a tragic end. They had each been stabbed, it seems, |
| and the Hungarian police were of opinion that they had quarreled and had |
| inflicted mortal injuries upon each other. Holmes, however, is, I fancy, |
| of a different way of thinking, and holds to this day that, if one could |
| find the Grecian girl, one might learn how the wrongs of herself and her |
| brother came to be avenged. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure X. The Naval Treaty |
| |
| |
| The July which immediately succeeded my marriage was made memorable |
| by three cases of interest, in which I had the privilege of being |
| associated with Sherlock Holmes and of studying his methods. I find them |
| recorded in my notes under the headings of "The Adventure of the Second |
| Stain," "The Adventure of the Naval Treaty," and "The Adventure of the |
| Tired Captain." The first of these, however, deals with interest of such |
| importance and implicates so many of the first families in the kingdom |
| that for many years it will be impossible to make it public. No case, |
| however, in which Holmes was engaged has ever illustrated the value |
| of his analytical methods so clearly or has impressed those who were |
| associated with him so deeply. I still retain an almost verbatim report |
| of the interview in which he demonstrated the true facts of the case |
| to Monsieur Dubugue of the Paris police, and Fritz von Waldbaum, the |
| well-known specialist of Dantzig, both of whom had wasted their energies |
| upon what proved to be side-issues. The new century will have come, |
| however, before the story can be safely told. Meanwhile I pass on to |
| the second on my list, which promised also at one time to be of national |
| importance, and was marked by several incidents which give it a quite |
| unique character. |
| |
| During my school-days I had been intimately associated with a lad named |
| Percy Phelps, who was of much the same age as myself, though he was two |
| classes ahead of me. He was a very brilliant boy, and carried away every |
| prize which the school had to offer, finished his exploits by winning |
| a scholarship which sent him on to continue his triumphant career at |
| Cambridge. He was, I remember, extremely well connected, and even when |
| we were all little boys together we knew that his mother's brother |
| was Lord Holdhurst, the great conservative politician. This gaudy |
| relationship did him little good at school. On the contrary, it seemed |
| rather a piquant thing to us to chevy him about the playground and hit |
| him over the shins with a wicket. But it was another thing when he |
| came out into the world. I heard vaguely that his abilities and the |
| influences which he commanded had won him a good position at the Foreign |
| Office, and then he passed completely out of my mind until the following |
| letter recalled his existence: |
| |
| |
| Briarbrae, Woking. My dear Watson,--I have no doubt that you can |
| remember "Tadpole" Phelps, who was in the fifth form when you were in |
| the third. It is possible even that you may have heard that through my |
| uncle's influence I obtained a good appointment at the Foreign Office, |
| and that I was in a situation of trust and honor until a horrible |
| misfortune came suddenly to blast my career. |
| |
| There is no use writing of the details of that dreadful event. In the |
| event of your acceding to my request it is probably that I shall have |
| to narrate them to you. I have only just recovered from nine weeks of |
| brain-fever, and am still exceedingly weak. Do you think that you could |
| bring your friend Mr. Holmes down to see me? I should like to have his |
| opinion of the case, though the authorities assure me that nothing more |
| can be done. Do try to bring him down, and as soon as possible. Every |
| minute seems an hour while I live in this state of horrible suspense. |
| Assure him that if I have not asked his advice sooner it was not because |
| I did not appreciate his talents, but because I have been off my head |
| ever since the blow fell. Now I am clear again, though I dare not think |
| of it too much for fear of a relapse. I am still so weak that I have to |
| write, as you see, by dictating. Do try to bring him. |
| |
| Your old school-fellow, |
| |
| Percy Phelps. |
| |
| |
| There was something that touched me as I read this letter, something |
| pitiable in the reiterated appeals to bring Holmes. So moved was I |
| that even had it been a difficult matter I should have tried it, but |
| of course I knew well that Holmes loved his art, so that he was ever |
| as ready to bring his aid as his client could be to receive it. My wife |
| agreed with me that not a moment should be lost in laying the matter |
| before him, and so within an hour of breakfast-time I found myself back |
| once more in the old rooms in Baker Street. |
| |
| Holmes was seated at his side-table clad in his dressing-gown, and |
| working hard over a chemical investigation. A large curved retort |
| was boiling furiously in the bluish flame of a Bunsen burner, and the |
| distilled drops were condensing into a two-litre measure. My friend |
| hardly glanced up as I entered, and I, seeing that his investigation |
| must be of importance, seated myself in an arm-chair and waited. He |
| dipped into this bottle or that, drawing out a few drops of each with |
| his glass pipette, and finally brought a test-tube containing a solution |
| over to the table. In his right hand he held a slip of litmus-paper. |
| |
| "You come at a crisis, Watson," said he. "If this paper remains blue, |
| all is well. If it turns red, it means a man's life." He dipped it into |
| the test-tube and it flushed at once into a dull, dirty crimson. "Hum! |
| I thought as much!" he cried. "I will be at your service in an instant, |
| Watson. You will find tobacco in the Persian slipper." He turned to his |
| desk and scribbled off several telegrams, which were handed over to the |
| page-boy. Then he threw himself down into the chair opposite, and drew |
| up his knees until his fingers clasped round his long, thin shins. |
| |
| "A very commonplace little murder," said he. "You've got something |
| better, I fancy. You are the stormy petrel of crime, Watson. What is |
| it?" |
| |
| I handed him the letter, which he read with the most concentrated |
| attention. |
| |
| "It does not tell us very much, does it?" he remarked, as he handed it |
| back to me. |
| |
| "Hardly anything." |
| |
| "And yet the writing is of interest." |
| |
| "But the writing is not his own." |
| |
| "Precisely. It is a woman's." |
| |
| "A man's surely," I cried. |
| |
| "No, a woman's, and a woman of rare character. You see, at the |
| commencement of an investigation it is something to know that your |
| client is in close contact with some one who, for good or evil, has an |
| exceptional nature. My interest is already awakened in the case. If you |
| are ready we will start at once for Woking, and see this diplomatist who |
| is in such evil case, and the lady to whom he dictates his letters." |
| |
| We were fortunate enough to catch an early train at Waterloo, and in |
| a little under an hour we found ourselves among the fir-woods and |
| the heather of Woking. Briarbrae proved to be a large detached house |
| standing in extensive grounds within a few minutes' walk of the station. |
| On sending in our cards we were shown into an elegantly appointed |
| drawing-room, where we were joined in a few minutes by a rather stout |
| man who received us with much hospitality. His age may have been nearer |
| forty than thirty, but his cheeks were so ruddy and his eyes so merry |
| that he still conveyed the impression of a plump and mischievous boy. |
| |
| "I am so glad that you have come," said he, shaking our hands with |
| effusion. "Percy has been inquiring for you all morning. Ah, poor old |
| chap, he clings to any straw! His father and his mother asked me to see |
| you, for the mere mention of the subject is very painful to them." |
| |
| "We have had no details yet," observed Holmes. "I perceive that you are |
| not yourself a member of the family." |
| |
| Our acquaintance looked surprised, and then, glancing down, he began to |
| laugh. |
| |
| "Of course you saw the J H monogram on my locket," said he. "For a |
| moment I thought you had done something clever. Joseph Harrison is my |
| name, and as Percy is to marry my sister Annie I shall at least be a |
| relation by marriage. You will find my sister in his room, for she has |
| nursed him hand-and-foot this two months back. Perhaps we'd better go in |
| at once, for I know how impatient he is." |
| |
| The chamber in which we were shown was on the same floor as the |
| drawing-room. It was furnished partly as a sitting and partly as a |
| bedroom, with flowers arranged daintily in every nook and corner. A |
| young man, very pale and worn, was lying upon a sofa near the open |
| window, through which came the rich scent of the garden and the balmy |
| summer air. A woman was sitting beside him, who rose as we entered. |
| |
| "Shall I leave, Percy?" she asked. |
| |
| He clutched her hand to detain her. "How are you, Watson?" said he, |
| cordially. "I should never have known you under that moustache, and I |
| dare say you would not be prepared to swear to me. This I presume is |
| your celebrated friend, Mr. Sherlock Holmes?" |
| |
| I introduced him in a few words, and we both sat down. The stout young |
| man had left us, but his sister still remained with her hand in that of |
| the invalid. She was a striking-looking woman, a little short and |
| thick for symmetry, but with a beautiful olive complexion, large, dark, |
| Italian eyes, and a wealth of deep black hair. Her rich tints made the |
| white face of her companion the more worn and haggard by the contrast. |
| |
| "I won't waste your time," said he, raising himself upon the sofa. |
| "I'll plunge into the matter without further preamble. I was a happy |
| and successful man, Mr. Holmes, and on the eve of being married, when a |
| sudden and dreadful misfortune wrecked all my prospects in life. |
| |
| "I was, as Watson may have told you, in the Foreign Office, and |
| through the influences of my uncle, Lord Holdhurst, I rose rapidly to |
| a responsible position. When my uncle became foreign minister in this |
| administration he gave me several missions of trust, and as I always |
| brought them to a successful conclusion, he came at last to have the |
| utmost confidence in my ability and tact. |
| |
| "Nearly ten weeks ago--to be more accurate, on the 23d of May--he called |
| me into his private room, and, after complimenting me on the good work |
| which I had done, he informed me that he had a new commission of trust |
| for me to execute. |
| |
| "'This,' said he, taking a gray roll of paper from his bureau, 'is the |
| original of that secret treaty between England and Italy of which, I |
| regret to say, some rumors have already got into the public press. It is |
| of enormous importance that nothing further should leak out. The French |
| or the Russian embassy would pay an immense sum to learn the contents |
| of these papers. They should not leave my bureau were it not that it |
| is absolutely necessary to have them copied. You have a desk in your |
| office?" |
| |
| "'Yes, sir.' |
| |
| "'Then take the treaty and lock it up there. I shall give directions |
| that you may remain behind when the others go, so that you may copy |
| it at your leisure without fear of being overlooked. When you have |
| finished, relock both the original and the draft in the desk, and hand |
| them over to me personally to-morrow morning.' |
| |
| "I took the papers and--" |
| |
| "Excuse me an instant," said Holmes. "Were you alone during this |
| conversation?" |
| |
| "Absolutely." |
| |
| "In a large room?" |
| |
| "Thirty feet each way." |
| |
| "In the centre?" |
| |
| "Yes, about it." |
| |
| "And speaking low?" |
| |
| "My uncle's voice is always remarkably low. I hardly spoke at all." |
| |
| "Thank you," said Holmes, shutting his eyes; "pray go on." |
| |
| "I did exactly what he indicated, and waited until the other clerks had |
| departed. One of them in my room, Charles Gorot, had some arrears |
| of work to make up, so I left him there and went out to dine. When I |
| returned he was gone. I was anxious to hurry my work, for I knew that |
| Joseph--the Mr. Harrison whom you saw just now--was in town, and that he |
| would travel down to Woking by the eleven-o'clock train, and I wanted if |
| possible to catch it. |
| |
| "When I came to examine the treaty I saw at once that it was of such |
| importance that my uncle had been guilty of no exaggeration in what |
| he had said. Without going into details, I may say that it defined the |
| position of Great Britain towards the Triple Alliance, and fore-shadowed |
| the policy which this country would pursue in the event of the |
| French fleet gaining a complete ascendancy over that of Italy in the |
| Mediterranean. The questions treated in it were purely naval. At the end |
| were the signatures of the high dignitaries who had signed it. I glanced |
| my eyes over it, and then settled down to my task of copying. |
| |
| "It was a long document, written in the French language, and containing |
| twenty-six separate articles. I copied as quickly as I could, but at |
| nine o'clock I had only done nine articles, and it seemed hopeless for |
| me to attempt to catch my train. I was feeling drowsy and stupid, partly |
| from my dinner and also from the effects of a long day's work. A cup of |
| coffee would clear my brain. A commissionnaire remains all night in a |
| little lodge at the foot of the stairs, and is in the habit of making |
| coffee at his spirit-lamp for any of the officials who may be working |
| over time. I rang the bell, therefore, to summon him. |
| |
| "To my surprise, it was a woman who answered the summons, a large, |
| coarse-faced, elderly woman, in an apron. She explained that she was the |
| commissionnaire's wife, who did the charing, and I gave her the order |
| for the coffee. |
| |
| "I wrote two more articles and then, feeling more drowsy than ever, I |
| rose and walked up and down the room to stretch my legs. My coffee had |
| not yet come, and I wondered what was the cause of the delay could be. |
| Opening the door, I started down the corridor to find out. There was a |
| straight passage, dimly lighted, which led from the room in which I |
| had been working, and was the only exit from it. It ended in a curving |
| staircase, with the commissionnaire's lodge in the passage at the |
| bottom. Half way down this staircase is a small landing, with another |
| passage running into it at right angles. This second one leads by means |
| of a second small stair to a side door, used by servants, and also as |
| a short cut by clerks when coming from Charles Street. Here is a rough |
| chart of the place." |
| |
| "Thank you. I think that I quite follow you," said Sherlock Holmes. |
| |
| "It is of the utmost importance that you should notice this point. |
| I went down the stairs and into the hall, where I found the |
| commissionnaire fast asleep in his box, with the kettle boiling |
| furiously upon the spirit-lamp. I took off the kettle and blew out the |
| lamp, for the water was spurting over the floor. Then I put out my hand |
| and was about to shake the man, who was still sleeping soundly, when a |
| bell over his head rang loudly, and he woke with a start. |
| |
| "'Mr. Phelps, sir!' said he, looking at me in bewilderment. |
| |
| "'I came down to see if my coffee was ready.' |
| |
| "'I was boiling the kettle when I fell asleep, sir.' He looked at me and |
| then up at the still quivering bell with an ever-growing astonishment |
| upon his face. |
| |
| "'If you was here, sir, then who rang the bell?' he asked. |
| |
| "'The bell!' I cried. 'What bell is it?' |
| |
| "'It's the bell of the room you were working in.' |
| |
| "A cold hand seemed to close round my heart. Some one, then, was in that |
| room where my precious treaty lay upon the table. I ran frantically up |
| the stair and along the passage. There was no one in the corridors, Mr. |
| Holmes. There was no one in the room. All was exactly as I left it, save |
| only that the papers which had been committed to my care had been taken |
| from the desk on which they lay. The copy was there, and the original |
| was gone." |
| |
| Holmes sat up in his chair and rubbed his hands. I could see that the |
| problem was entirely to his heart. "Pray, what did you do then?" he |
| murmured. |
| |
| "I recognized in an instant that the thief must have come up the stairs |
| from the side door. Of course I must have met him if he had come the |
| other way." |
| |
| "You were satisfied that he could not have been concealed in the room |
| all the time, or in the corridor which you have just described as dimly |
| lighted?" |
| |
| "It is absolutely impossible. A rat could not conceal himself either in |
| the room or the corridor. There is no cover at all." |
| |
| "Thank you. Pray proceed." |
| |
| "The commissionnaire, seeing by my pale face that something was to be |
| feared, had followed me upstairs. Now we both rushed along the corridor |
| and down the steep steps which led to Charles Street. The door at the |
| bottom was closed, but unlocked. We flung it open and rushed out. I can |
| distinctly remember that as we did so there came three chimes from a |
| neighboring clock. It was quarter to ten." |
| |
| "That is of enormous importance," said Holmes, making a note upon his |
| shirt-cuff. |
| |
| "The night was very dark, and a thin, warm rain was falling. There was |
| no one in Charles Street, but a great traffic was going on, as usual, in |
| Whitehall, at the extremity. We rushed along the pavement, bare-headed |
| as we were, and at the far corner we found a policeman standing. |
| |
| "'A robbery has been committed,' I gasped. 'A document of immense value |
| has been stolen from the Foreign Office. Has any one passed this way?' |
| |
| "'I have been standing here for a quarter of an hour, sir,' said he; |
| 'only one person has passed during that time--a woman, tall and elderly, |
| with a Paisley shawl.' |
| |
| "'Ah, that is only my wife,' cried the commissionnaire; 'has no one else |
| passed?' |
| |
| "'No one.' |
| |
| "'Then it must be the other way that the thief took,' cried the fellow, |
| tugging at my sleeve. |
| |
| "'But I was not satisfied, and the attempts which he made to draw me |
| away increased my suspicions. |
| |
| "'Which way did the woman go?' I cried. |
| |
| "'I don't know, sir. I noticed her pass, but I had no special reason for |
| watching her. She seemed to be in a hurry.' |
| |
| "'How long ago was it?' |
| |
| "'Oh, not very many minutes.' |
| |
| "'Within the last five?' |
| |
| "'Well, it could not be more than five.' |
| |
| "'You're only wasting your time, sir, and every minute now is of |
| importance,' cried the commissionnaire; 'take my word for it that my old |
| woman has nothing to do with it, and come down to the other end of the |
| street. Well, if you won't, I will.' And with that he rushed off in the |
| other direction. |
| |
| "But I was after him in an instant and caught him by the sleeve. |
| |
| "'Where do you live?' said I. |
| |
| "'16 Ivy Lane, Brixton,' he answered. 'But don't let yourself be drawn |
| away upon a false scent, Mr. Phelps. Come to the other end of the street |
| and let us see if we can hear of anything.' |
| |
| "Nothing was to be lost by following his advice. With the policeman we |
| both hurried down, but only to find the street full of traffic, many |
| people coming and going, but all only too eager to get to a place of |
| safety upon so wet a night. There was no lounger who could tell us who |
| had passed. |
| |
| "Then we returned to the office, and searched the stairs and the passage |
| without result. The corridor which led to the room was laid down with |
| a kind of creamy linoleum which shows an impression very easily. We |
| examined it very carefully, but found no outline of any footmark." |
| |
| "Had it been raining all evening?" |
| |
| "Since about seven." |
| |
| "How is it, then, that the woman who came into the room about nine left |
| no traces with her muddy boots?" |
| |
| "I am glad you raised the point. It occurred to me at the time. |
| The charwomen are in the habit of taking off their boots at the |
| commissionnaire's office, and putting on list slippers." |
| |
| "That is very clear. There were no marks, then, though the night was a |
| wet one? The chain of events is certainly one of extraordinary interest. |
| What did you do next? |
| |
| "We examined the room also. There is no possibility of a secret door, |
| and the windows are quite thirty feet from the ground. Both of them |
| were fastened on the inside. The carpet prevents any possibility of a |
| trap-door, and the ceiling is of the ordinary whitewashed kind. I will |
| pledge my life that whoever stole my papers could only have come through |
| the door." |
| |
| "How about the fireplace?" |
| |
| "They use none. There is a stove. The bell-rope hangs from the wire just |
| to the right of my desk. Whoever rang it must have come right up to the |
| desk to do it. But why should any criminal wish to ring the bell? It is |
| a most insoluble mystery." |
| |
| "Certainly the incident was unusual. What were your next steps? You |
| examined the room, I presume, to see if the intruder had left any |
| traces--any cigar-end or dropped glove or hairpin or other trifle?" |
| |
| "There was nothing of the sort." |
| |
| "No smell?" |
| |
| "Well, we never thought of that." |
| |
| "Ah, a scent of tobacco would have been worth a great deal to us in such |
| an investigation." |
| |
| "I never smoke myself, so I think I should have observed it if there had |
| been any smell of tobacco. There was absolutely no clue of any kind. The |
| only tangible fact was that the commissionnaire's wife--Mrs. Tangey was |
| the name--had hurried out of the place. He could give no explanation |
| save that it was about the time when the woman always went home. The |
| policeman and I agreed that our best plan would be to seize the woman |
| before she could get rid of the papers, presuming that she had them. |
| |
| "The alarm had reached Scotland Yard by this time, and Mr. Forbes, the |
| detective, came round at once and took up the case with a great deal of |
| energy. We hired a hansom, and in half an hour we were at the address |
| which had been given to us. A young woman opened the door, who proved to |
| be Mrs. Tangey's eldest daughter. Her mother had not come back yet, and |
| we were shown into the front room to wait. |
| |
| "About ten minutes later a knock came at the door, and here we made the |
| one serious mistake for which I blame myself. Instead of opening the |
| door ourselves, we allowed the girl to do so. We heard her say, 'Mother, |
| there are two men in the house waiting to see you,' and an instant |
| afterwards we heard the patter of feet rushing down the passage. Forbes |
| flung open the door, and we both ran into the back room or kitchen, but |
| the woman had got there before us. She stared at us with defiant |
| eyes, and then, suddenly recognizing me, an expression of absolute |
| astonishment came over her face. |
| |
| "'Why, if it isn't Mr. Phelps, of the office!' she cried. |
| |
| "'Come, come, who did you think we were when you ran away from us?' |
| asked my companion. |
| |
| "'I thought you were the brokers,' said she, 'we have had some trouble |
| with a tradesman.' |
| |
| "'That's not quite good enough,' answered Forbes. 'We have reason to |
| believe that you have taken a paper of importance from the Foreign |
| Office, and that you ran in here to dispose of it. You must come back |
| with us to Scotland Yard to be searched.' |
| |
| "It was in vain that she protested and resisted. A four-wheeler was |
| brought, and we all three drove back in it. We had first made an |
| examination of the kitchen, and especially of the kitchen fire, to see |
| whether she might have made away with the papers during the instant that |
| she was alone. There were no signs, however, of any ashes or scraps. |
| When we reached Scotland Yard she was handed over at once to the female |
| searcher. I waited in an agony of suspense until she came back with her |
| report. There were no signs of the papers. |
| |
| "Then for the first time the horror of my situation came in its full |
| force. Hitherto I had been acting, and action had numbed thought. I had |
| been so confident of regaining the treaty at once that I had not dared |
| to think of what would be the consequence if I failed to do so. But |
| now there was nothing more to be done, and I had leisure to realize |
| my position. It was horrible. Watson there would tell you that I was a |
| nervous, sensitive boy at school. It is my nature. I thought of my uncle |
| and of his colleagues in the Cabinet, of the shame which I had brought |
| upon him, upon myself, upon every one connected with me. What though I |
| was the victim of an extraordinary accident? No allowance is made |
| for accidents where diplomatic interests are at stake. I was ruined, |
| shamefully, hopelessly ruined. I don't know what I did. I fancy I must |
| have made a scene. I have a dim recollection of a group of officials who |
| crowded round me, endeavoring to soothe me. One of them drove down with |
| me to Waterloo, and saw me into the Woking train. I believe that he |
| would have come all the way had it not been that Dr. Ferrier, who lives |
| near me, was going down by that very train. The doctor most kindly took |
| charge of me, and it was well he did so, for I had a fit in the station, |
| and before we reached home I was practically a raving maniac. |
| |
| "You can imagine the state of things here when they were roused from |
| their beds by the doctor's ringing and found me in this condition. Poor |
| Annie here and my mother were broken-hearted. Dr. Ferrier had just heard |
| enough from the detective at the station to be able to give an idea of |
| what had happened, and his story did not mend matters. It was evident to |
| all that I was in for a long illness, so Joseph was bundled out of this |
| cheery bedroom, and it was turned into a sick-room for me. Here I have |
| lain, Mr. Holmes, for over nine weeks, unconscious, and raving with |
| brain-fever. If it had not been for Miss Harrison here and for the |
| doctor's care I should not be speaking to you now. She has nursed me by |
| day and a hired nurse has looked after me by night, for in my mad fits |
| I was capable of anything. Slowly my reason has cleared, but it is only |
| during the last three days that my memory has quite returned. Sometimes |
| I wish that it never had. The first thing that I did was to wire to |
| Mr. Forbes, who had the case in hand. He came out, and assures me that, |
| though everything has been done, no trace of a clue has been discovered. |
| The commissionnaire and his wife have been examined in every way without |
| any light being thrown upon the matter. The suspicions of the police |
| then rested upon young Gorot, who, as you may remember, stayed over time |
| in the office that night. His remaining behind and his French name were |
| really the only two points which could suggest suspicion; but, as a |
| matter of fact, I did not begin work until he had gone, and his people |
| are of Huguenot extraction, but as English in sympathy and tradition as |
| you and I are. Nothing was found to implicate him in any way, and there |
| the matter dropped. I turn to you, Mr. Holmes, as absolutely my last |
| hope. If you fail me, then my honor as well as my position are forever |
| forfeited." |
| |
| The invalid sank back upon his cushions, tired out by this long recital, |
| while his nurse poured him out a glass of some stimulating medicine. |
| Holmes sat silently, with his head thrown back and his eyes closed, in |
| an attitude which might seem listless to a stranger, but which I knew |
| betokened the most intense self-absorption. |
| |
| "You statement has been so explicit," said he at last, "that you have |
| really left me very few questions to ask. There is one of the very |
| utmost importance, however. Did you tell any one that you had this |
| special task to perform?" |
| |
| "No one." |
| |
| "Not Miss Harrison here, for example?" |
| |
| "No. I had not been back to Woking between getting the order and |
| executing the commission." |
| |
| "And none of your people had by chance been to see you?" |
| |
| "None." |
| |
| "Did any of them know their way about in the office?" |
| |
| "Oh, yes, all of them had been shown over it." |
| |
| "Still, of course, if you said nothing to any one about the treaty these |
| inquiries are irrelevant." |
| |
| "I said nothing." |
| |
| "Do you know anything of the commissionnaire?" |
| |
| "Nothing except that he is an old soldier." |
| |
| "What regiment?" |
| |
| "Oh, I have heard--Coldstream Guards." |
| |
| "Thank you. I have no doubt I can get details from Forbes. The |
| authorities are excellent at amassing facts, though they do not always |
| use them to advantage. What a lovely thing a rose is!" |
| |
| He walked past the couch to the open window, and held up the drooping |
| stalk of a moss-rose, looking down at the dainty blend of crimson and |
| green. It was a new phase of his character to me, for I had never before |
| seen him show any keen interest in natural objects. |
| |
| "There is nothing in which deduction is so necessary as in religion," |
| said he, leaning with his back against the shutters. "It can be built |
| up as an exact science by the reasoner. Our highest assurance of the |
| goodness of Providence seems to me to rest in the flowers. All other |
| things, our powers our desires, our food, are all really necessary for |
| our existence in the first instance. But this rose is an extra. Its |
| smell and its color are an embellishment of life, not a condition of it. |
| It is only goodness which gives extras, and so I say again that we have |
| much to hope from the flowers." |
| |
| Percy Phelps and his nurse looked at Holmes during this demonstration |
| with surprise and a good deal of disappointment written upon their |
| faces. He had fallen into a reverie, with the moss-rose between his |
| fingers. It had lasted some minutes before the young lady broke in upon |
| it. |
| |
| "Do you see any prospect of solving this mystery, Mr. Holmes?" she |
| asked, with a touch of asperity in her voice. |
| |
| "Oh, the mystery!" he answered, coming back with a start to the |
| realities of life. "Well, it would be absurd to deny that the case is |
| a very abstruse and complicated one, but I can promise you that I will |
| look into the matter and let you know any points which may strike me." |
| |
| "Do you see any clue?" |
| |
| "You have furnished me with seven, but, of course, I must test them |
| before I can pronounce upon their value." |
| |
| "You suspect some one?" |
| |
| "I suspect myself." |
| |
| "What!" |
| |
| "Of coming to conclusions too rapidly." |
| |
| "Then go to London and test your conclusions." |
| |
| "Your advice is very excellent, Miss Harrison," said Holmes, rising. "I |
| think, Watson, we cannot do better. Do not allow yourself to indulge in |
| false hopes, Mr. Phelps. The affair is a very tangled one." |
| |
| "I shall be in a fever until I see you again," cried the diplomatist. |
| |
| "Well, I'll come out by the same train to-morrow, though it's more than |
| likely that my report will be a negative one." |
| |
| "God bless you for promising to come," cried our client. "It gives me |
| fresh life to know that something is being done. By the way, I have had |
| a letter from Lord Holdhurst." |
| |
| "Ha! What did he say?" |
| |
| "He was cold, but not harsh. I dare say my severe illness prevented |
| him from being that. He repeated that the matter was of the utmost |
| importance, and added that no steps would be taken about my future--by |
| which he means, of course, my dismissal--until my health was restored |
| and I had an opportunity of repairing my misfortune." |
| |
| "Well, that was reasonable and considerate," said Holmes. "Come, Watson, |
| for we have a good day's work before us in town." |
| |
| Mr. Joseph Harrison drove us down to the station, and we were soon |
| whirling up in a Portsmouth train. Holmes was sunk in profound thought, |
| and hardly opened his mouth until we had passed Clapham Junction. |
| |
| "It's a very cheery thing to come into London by any of these lines |
| which run high, and allow you to look down upon the houses like this." |
| |
| I thought he was joking, for the view was sordid enough, but he soon |
| explained himself. |
| |
| "Look at those big, isolated clumps of building rising up above the |
| slates, like brick islands in a lead-colored sea." |
| |
| "The board-schools." |
| |
| "Light-houses, my boy! Beacons of the future! Capsules with hundreds of |
| bright little seeds in each, out of which will spring the wise, better |
| England of the future. I suppose that man Phelps does not drink?" |
| |
| "I should not think so." |
| |
| "Nor should I, but we are bound to take every possibility into account. |
| The poor devil has certainly got himself into very deep water, and it's |
| a question whether we shall ever be able to get him ashore. What did you |
| think of Miss Harrison?" |
| |
| "A girl of strong character." |
| |
| "Yes, but she is a good sort, or I am mistaken. She and her brother are |
| the only children of an iron-master somewhere up Northumberland way. He |
| got engaged to her when traveling last winter, and she came down to |
| be introduced to his people, with her brother as escort. Then came |
| the smash, and she stayed on to nurse her lover, while brother Joseph, |
| finding himself pretty snug, stayed on too. I've been making a few |
| independent inquiries, you see. But to-day must be a day of inquiries." |
| |
| "My practice--" I began. |
| |
| "Oh, if you find your own cases more interesting than mine--" said |
| Holmes, with some asperity. |
| |
| "I was going to say that my practice could get along very well for a day |
| or two, since it is the slackest time in the year." |
| |
| "Excellent," said he, recovering his good-humor. "Then we'll look into |
| this matter together. I think that we should begin by seeing Forbes. |
| He can probably tell us all the details we want until we know from what |
| side the case is to be approached." |
| |
| "You said you had a clue?" |
| |
| "Well, we have several, but we can only test their value by further |
| inquiry. The most difficult crime to track is the one which is |
| purposeless. Now this is not purposeless. Who is it who profits by it? |
| There is the French ambassador, there is the Russian, there is whoever |
| might sell it to either of these, and there is Lord Holdhurst." |
| |
| "Lord Holdhurst!" |
| |
| "Well, it is just conceivable that a statesman might find himself in |
| a position where he was not sorry to have such a document accidentally |
| destroyed." |
| |
| "Not a statesman with the honorable record of Lord Holdhurst?" |
| |
| "It is a possibility and we cannot afford to disregard it. We shall see |
| the noble lord to-day and find out if he can tell us anything. Meanwhile |
| I have already set inquiries on foot." |
| |
| "Already?" |
| |
| "Yes, I sent wires from Woking station to every evening paper in London. |
| This advertisement will appear in each of them." |
| |
| He handed over a sheet torn from a note-book. On it was scribbled in |
| pencil: "L10 reward. The number of the cab which dropped a fare at or |
| about the door of the Foreign Office in Charles Street at quarter to ten |
| in the evening of May 23d. Apply 221 B, Baker Street." |
| |
| "You are confident that the thief came in a cab?" |
| |
| "If not, there is no harm done. But if Mr. Phelps is correct in stating |
| that there is no hiding-place either in the room or the corridors, then |
| the person must have come from outside. If he came from outside on so |
| wet a night, and yet left no trace of damp upon the linoleum, which |
| was examined within a few minutes of his passing, then it is exceeding |
| probable that he came in a cab. Yes, I think that we may safely deduce a |
| cab." |
| |
| "It sounds plausible." |
| |
| "That is one of the clues of which I spoke. It may lead us to something. |
| And then, of course, there is the bell--which is the most distinctive |
| feature of the case. Why should the bell ring? Was it the thief who did |
| it out of bravado? Or was it some one who was with the thief who did it |
| in order to prevent the crime? Or was it an accident? Or was it--?" He |
| sank back into the state of intense and silent thought from which he |
| had emerged; but it seemed to me, accustomed as I was to his every mood, |
| that some new possibility had dawned suddenly upon him. |
| |
| It was twenty past three when we reached our terminus, and after a hasty |
| luncheon at the buffet we pushed on at once to Scotland Yard. Holmes |
| had already wired to Forbes, and we found him waiting to receive us--a |
| small, foxy man with a sharp but by no means amiable expression. He |
| was decidedly frigid in his manner to us, especially when he heard the |
| errand upon which we had come. |
| |
| "I've heard of your methods before now, Mr. Holmes," said he, tartly. |
| "You are ready enough to use all the information that the police can lay |
| at your disposal, and then you try to finish the case yourself and bring |
| discredit on them." |
| |
| "On the contrary," said Holmes, "out of my last fifty-three cases my |
| name has only appeared in four, and the police have had all the credit |
| in forty-nine. I don't blame you for not knowing this, for you are young |
| and inexperienced, but if you wish to get on in your new duties you will |
| work with me and not against me." |
| |
| "I'd be very glad of a hint or two," said the detective, changing his |
| manner. "I've certainly had no credit from the case so far." |
| |
| "What steps have you taken?" |
| |
| "Tangey, the commissionnaire, has been shadowed. He left the Guards with |
| a good character and we can find nothing against him. His wife is a bad |
| lot, though. I fancy she knows more about this than appears." |
| |
| "Have you shadowed her?" |
| |
| "We have set one of our women on to her. Mrs. Tangey drinks, and our |
| woman has been with her twice when she was well on, but she could get |
| nothing out of her." |
| |
| "I understand that they have had brokers in the house?" |
| |
| "Yes, but they were paid off." |
| |
| "Where did the money come from?" |
| |
| "That was all right. His pension was due. They have not shown any sign |
| of being in funds." |
| |
| "What explanation did she give of having answered the bell when Mr. |
| Phelps rang for the coffee?" |
| |
| "She said that he husband was very tired and she wished to relieve him." |
| |
| "Well, certainly that would agree with his being found a little later |
| asleep in his chair. There is nothing against them then but the woman's |
| character. Did you ask her why she hurried away that night? Her haste |
| attracted the attention of the police constable." |
| |
| "She was later than usual and wanted to get home." |
| |
| "Did you point out to her that you and Mr. Phelps, who started at least |
| twenty minutes after her, got home before her?" |
| |
| "She explains that by the difference between a 'bus and a hansom." |
| |
| "Did she make it clear why, on reaching her house, she ran into the back |
| kitchen?" |
| |
| "Because she had the money there with which to pay off the brokers." |
| |
| "She has at least an answer for everything. Did you ask her whether in |
| leaving she met any one or saw any one loitering about Charles Street?" |
| |
| "She saw no one but the constable." |
| |
| "Well, you seem to have cross-examined her pretty thoroughly. What else |
| have you done?" |
| |
| "The clerk Gorot has been shadowed all these nine weeks, but without |
| result. We can show nothing against him." |
| |
| "Anything else?" |
| |
| "Well, we have nothing else to go upon--no evidence of any kind." |
| |
| "Have you formed a theory about how that bell rang?" |
| |
| "Well, I must confess that it beats me. It was a cool hand, whoever it |
| was, to go and give the alarm like that." |
| |
| "Yes, it was queer thing to do. Many thanks to you for what you have |
| told me. If I can put the man into your hands you shall hear from me. |
| Come along, Watson." |
| |
| "Where are we going to now?" I asked, as we left the office. |
| |
| "We are now going to interview Lord Holdhurst, the cabinet minister and |
| future premier of England." |
| |
| We were fortunate in finding that Lord Holdhurst was still in his |
| chambers in Downing Street, and on Holmes sending in his card we were |
| instantly shown up. The statesman received us with that old-fashioned |
| courtesy for which he is remarkable, and seated us on the two luxuriant |
| lounges on either side of the fireplace. Standing on the rug between us, |
| with his slight, tall figure, his sharp features, thoughtful face, and |
| curling hair prematurely tinged with gray, he seemed to represent that |
| not too common type, a nobleman who is in truth noble. |
| |
| "Your name is very familiar to me, Mr. Holmes," said he, smiling. "And, |
| of course, I cannot pretend to be ignorant of the object of your visit. |
| There has only been one occurrence in these offices which could call for |
| your attention. In whose interest are you acting, may I ask?" |
| |
| "In that of Mr. Percy Phelps," answered Holmes. |
| |
| "Ah, my unfortunate nephew! You can understand that our kinship makes |
| it the more impossible for me to screen him in any way. I fear that the |
| incident must have a very prejudicial effect upon his career." |
| |
| "But if the document is found?" |
| |
| "Ah, that, of course, would be different." |
| |
| "I had one or two questions which I wished to ask you, Lord Holdhurst." |
| |
| "I shall be happy to give you any information in my power." |
| |
| "Was it in this room that you gave your instructions as to the copying |
| of the document?" |
| |
| "It was." |
| |
| "Then you could hardly have been overheard?" |
| |
| "It is out of the question." |
| |
| "Did you ever mention to any one that it was your intention to give any |
| one the treaty to be copied?" |
| |
| "Never." |
| |
| "You are certain of that?" |
| |
| "Absolutely." |
| |
| "Well, since you never said so, and Mr. Phelps never said so, and nobody |
| else knew anything of the matter, then the thief's presence in the room |
| was purely accidental. He saw his chance and he took it." |
| |
| The statesman smiled. "You take me out of my province there," said he. |
| |
| Holmes considered for a moment. "There is another very important |
| point which I wish to discuss with you," said he. "You feared, as I |
| understand, that very grave results might follow from the details of |
| this treaty becoming known." |
| |
| A shadow passed over the expressive face of the statesman. "Very grave |
| results indeed." |
| |
| "Any have they occurred?" |
| |
| "Not yet." |
| |
| "If the treaty had reached, let us say, the French or Russian Foreign |
| Office, you would expect to hear of it?" |
| |
| "I should," said Lord Holdhurst, with a wry face. |
| |
| "Since nearly ten weeks have elapsed, then, and nothing has been heard, |
| it is not unfair to suppose that for some reason the treaty has not |
| reached them." |
| |
| Lord Holdhurst shrugged his shoulders. |
| |
| "We can hardly suppose, Mr. Holmes, that the thief took the treaty in |
| order to frame it and hang it up." |
| |
| "Perhaps he is waiting for a better price." |
| |
| "If he waits a little longer he will get no price at all. The treaty |
| will cease to be secret in a few months." |
| |
| "That is most important," said Holmes. "Of course, it is a possible |
| supposition that the thief has had a sudden illness--" |
| |
| "An attack of brain-fever, for example?" asked the statesman, flashing a |
| swift glance at him. |
| |
| "I did not say so," said Holmes, imperturbably. "And now, Lord |
| Holdhurst, we have already taken up too much of your valuable time, and |
| we shall wish you good-day." |
| |
| "Every success to your investigation, be the criminal who it may," |
| answered the nobleman, as he bowed us out the door. |
| |
| "He's a fine fellow," said Holmes, as we came out into Whitehall. "But |
| he has a struggle to keep up his position. He is far from rich and has |
| many calls. You noticed, of course, that his boots had been resoled. |
| Now, Watson, I won't detain you from your legitimate work any longer. |
| I shall do nothing more to-day, unless I have an answer to my cab |
| advertisement. But I should be extremely obliged to you if you would |
| come down with me to Woking to-morrow, by the same train which we took |
| yesterday." |
| |
| |
| I met him accordingly next morning and we traveled down to Woking |
| together. He had had no answer to his advertisement, he said, and no |
| fresh light had been thrown upon the case. He had, when he so willed |
| it, the utter immobility of countenance of a red Indian, and I could |
| not gather from his appearance whether he was satisfied or not with |
| the position of the case. His conversation, I remember, was about the |
| Bertillon system of measurements, and he expressed his enthusiastic |
| admiration of the French savant. |
| |
| We found our client still under the charge of his devoted nurse, but |
| looking considerably better than before. He rose from the sofa and |
| greeted us without difficulty when we entered. |
| |
| "Any news?" he asked, eagerly. |
| |
| "My report, as I expected, is a negative one," said Holmes. "I have seen |
| Forbes, and I have seen your uncle, and I have set one or two trains of |
| inquiry upon foot which may lead to something." |
| |
| "You have not lost heart, then?" |
| |
| "By no means." |
| |
| "God bless you for saying that!" cried Miss Harrison. "If we keep our |
| courage and our patience the truth must come out." |
| |
| "We have more to tell you than you have for us," said Phelps, reseating |
| himself upon the couch. |
| |
| "I hoped you might have something." |
| |
| "Yes, we have had an adventure during the night, and one which might |
| have proved to be a serious one." His expression grew very grave as he |
| spoke, and a look of something akin to fear sprang up in his eyes. "Do |
| you know," said he, "that I begin to believe that I am the unconscious |
| centre of some monstrous conspiracy, and that my life is aimed at as |
| well as my honor?" |
| |
| "Ah!" cried Holmes. |
| |
| "It sounds incredible, for I have not, as far as I know, an enemy in |
| the world. Yet from last night's experience I can come to no other |
| conclusion." |
| |
| "Pray let me hear it." |
| |
| "You must know that last night was the very first night that I have ever |
| slept without a nurse in the room. I was so much better that I thought |
| I could dispense with one. I had a night-light burning, however. Well, |
| about two in the morning I had sunk into a light sleep when I was |
| suddenly aroused by a slight noise. It was like the sound which a mouse |
| makes when it is gnawing a plank, and I lay listening to it for some |
| time under the impression that it must come from that cause. Then it |
| grew louder, and suddenly there came from the window a sharp metallic |
| snick. I sat up in amazement. There could be no doubt what the sounds |
| were now. The first ones had been caused by some one forcing an |
| instrument through the slit between the sashes, and the second by the |
| catch being pressed back. |
| |
| "There was a pause then for about ten minutes, as if the person were |
| waiting to see whether the noise had awakened me. Then I heard a gentle |
| creaking as the window was very slowly opened. I could stand it no |
| longer, for my nerves are not what they used to be. I sprang out of bed |
| and flung open the shutters. A man was crouching at the window. I could |
| see little of him, for he was gone like a flash. He was wrapped in some |
| sort of cloak which came across the lower part of his face. One thing |
| only I am sure of, and that is that he had some weapon in his hand. It |
| looked to me like a long knife. I distinctly saw the gleam of it as he |
| turned to run." |
| |
| "This is most interesting," said Holmes. "Pray what did you do then?" |
| |
| "I should have followed him through the open window if I had been |
| stronger. As it was, I rang the bell and roused the house. It took me |
| some little time, for the bell rings in the kitchen and the servants all |
| sleep upstairs. I shouted, however, and that brought Joseph down, and he |
| roused the others. Joseph and the groom found marks on the bed outside |
| the window, but the weather has been so dry lately that they found it |
| hopeless to follow the trail across the grass. There's a place, however, |
| on the wooden fence which skirts the road which shows signs, they tell |
| me, as if some one had got over, and had snapped the top of the rail in |
| doing so. I have said nothing to the local police yet, for I thought I |
| had best have your opinion first." |
| |
| This tale of our client's appeared to have an extraordinary effect upon |
| Sherlock Holmes. He rose from his chair and paced about the room in |
| uncontrollable excitement. |
| |
| "Misfortunes never come single," said Phelps, smiling, though it was |
| evident that his adventure had somewhat shaken him. |
| |
| "You have certainly had your share," said Holmes. "Do you think you |
| could walk round the house with me?" |
| |
| "Oh, yes, I should like a little sunshine. Joseph will come, too." |
| |
| "And I also," said Miss Harrison. |
| |
| "I am afraid not," said Holmes, shaking his head. "I think I must ask |
| you to remain sitting exactly where you are." |
| |
| The young lady resumed her seat with an air of displeasure. Her brother, |
| however, had joined us and we set off all four together. We passed round |
| the lawn to the outside of the young diplomatist's window. There were, |
| as he had said, marks upon the bed, but they were hopelessly blurred and |
| vague. Holmes stopped over them for an instant, and then rose shrugging |
| his shoulders. |
| |
| "I don't think any one could make much of this," said he. "Let us go |
| round the house and see why this particular room was chosen by the |
| burglar. I should have thought those larger windows of the drawing-room |
| and dining-room would have had more attractions for him." |
| |
| "They are more visible from the road," suggested Mr. Joseph Harrison. |
| |
| "Ah, yes, of course. There is a door here which he might have attempted. |
| What is it for?" |
| |
| "It is the side entrance for trades-people. Of course it is locked at |
| night." |
| |
| "Have you ever had an alarm like this before?" |
| |
| "Never," said our client. |
| |
| "Do you keep plate in the house, or anything to attract burglars?" |
| |
| "Nothing of value." |
| |
| Holmes strolled round the house with his hands in his pockets and a |
| negligent air which was unusual with him. |
| |
| "By the way," said he to Joseph Harrison, "you found some place, I |
| understand, where the fellow scaled the fence. Let us have a look at |
| that!" |
| |
| The plump young man led us to a spot where the top of one of the wooden |
| rails had been cracked. A small fragment of the wood was hanging down. |
| Holmes pulled it off and examined it critically. |
| |
| "Do you think that was done last night? It looks rather old, does it |
| not?" |
| |
| "Well, possibly so." |
| |
| "There are no marks of any one jumping down upon the other side. No, I |
| fancy we shall get no help here. Let us go back to the bedroom and talk |
| the matter over." |
| |
| Percy Phelps was walking very slowly, leaning upon the arm of his future |
| brother-in-law. Holmes walked swiftly across the lawn, and we were at |
| the open window of the bedroom long before the others came up. |
| |
| "Miss Harrison," said Holmes, speaking with the utmost intensity of |
| manner, "you must stay where you are all day. Let nothing prevent you |
| from staying where you are all day. It is of the utmost importance." |
| |
| "Certainly, if you wish it, Mr. Holmes," said the girl in astonishment. |
| |
| "When you go to bed lock the door of this room on the outside and keep |
| the key. Promise to do this." |
| |
| "But Percy?" |
| |
| "He will come to London with us." |
| |
| "And am I to remain here?" |
| |
| "It is for his sake. You can serve him. Quick! Promise!" |
| |
| She gave a quick nod of assent just as the other two came up. |
| |
| "Why do you sit moping there, Annie?" cried her brother. "Come out into |
| the sunshine!" |
| |
| "No, thank you, Joseph. I have a slight headache and this room is |
| deliciously cool and soothing." |
| |
| "What do you propose now, Mr. Holmes?" asked our client. |
| |
| "Well, in investigating this minor affair we must not lose sight of our |
| main inquiry. It would be a very great help to me if you would come up |
| to London with us." |
| |
| "At once?" |
| |
| "Well, as soon as you conveniently can. Say in an hour." |
| |
| "I feel quite strong enough, if I can really be of any help." |
| |
| "The greatest possible." |
| |
| "Perhaps you would like me to stay there to-night?" |
| |
| "I was just going to propose it." |
| |
| "Then, if my friend of the night comes to revisit me, he will find the |
| bird flown. We are all in your hands, Mr. Holmes, and you must tell us |
| exactly what you would like done. Perhaps you would prefer that Joseph |
| came with us so as to look after me?" |
| |
| "Oh, no; my friend Watson is a medical man, you know, and he'll look |
| after you. We'll have our lunch here, if you will permit us, and then we |
| shall all three set off for town together." |
| |
| It was arranged as he suggested, though Miss Harrison excused herself |
| from leaving the bedroom, in accordance with Holmes's suggestion. What |
| the object of my friend's manoeuvres was I could not conceive, unless it |
| were to keep the lady away from Phelps, who, rejoiced by his |
| returning health and by the prospect of action, lunched with us in the |
| dining-room. Holmes had a still more startling surprise for us, however, |
| for, after accompanying us down to the station and seeing us into |
| our carriage, he calmly announced that he had no intention of leaving |
| Woking. |
| |
| "There are one or two small points which I should desire to clear up |
| before I go," said he. "Your absence, Mr. Phelps, will in some ways |
| rather assist me. Watson, when you reach London you would oblige me by |
| driving at once to Baker Street with our friend here, and remaining |
| with him until I see you again. It is fortunate that you are old |
| school-fellows, as you must have much to talk over. Mr. Phelps can |
| have the spare bedroom to-night, and I will be with you in time for |
| breakfast, for there is a train which will take me into Waterloo at |
| eight." |
| |
| "But how about our investigation in London?" asked Phelps, ruefully. |
| |
| "We can do that to-morrow. I think that just at present I can be of more |
| immediate use here." |
| |
| "You might tell them at Briarbrae that I hope to be back to-morrow |
| night," cried Phelps, as we began to move from the platform. |
| |
| "I hardly expect to go back to Briarbrae," answered Holmes, and waved |
| his hand to us cheerily as we shot out from the station. |
| |
| Phelps and I talked it over on our journey, but neither of us could |
| devise a satisfactory reason for this new development. |
| |
| "I suppose he wants to find out some clue as to the burglary last night, |
| if a burglar it was. For myself, I don't believe it was an ordinary |
| thief." |
| |
| "What is your own idea, then?" |
| |
| "Upon my word, you may put it down to my weak nerves or not, but I |
| believe there is some deep political intrigue going on around me, and |
| that for some reason that passes my understanding my life is aimed at |
| by the conspirators. It sounds high-flown and absurd, but consider the |
| facts! Why should a thief try to break in at a bedroom window, where |
| there could be no hope of any plunder, and why should he come with a |
| long knife in his hand?" |
| |
| "You are sure it was not a house-breaker's jimmy?" |
| |
| "Oh, no, it was a knife. I saw the flash of the blade quite distinctly." |
| |
| "But why on earth should you be pursued with such animosity?" |
| |
| "Ah, that is the question." |
| |
| "Well, if Holmes takes the same view, that would account for his action, |
| would it not? Presuming that your theory is correct, if he can lay his |
| hands upon the man who threatened you last night he will have gone a |
| long way towards finding who took the naval treaty. It is absurd to |
| suppose that you have two enemies, one of whom robs you, while the other |
| threatens your life." |
| |
| "But Holmes said that he was not going to Briarbrae." |
| |
| "I have known him for some time," said I, "but I never knew him do |
| anything yet without a very good reason," and with that our conversation |
| drifted off on to other topics. |
| |
| But it was a weary day for me. Phelps was still weak after his long |
| illness, and his misfortune made him querulous and nervous. In vain |
| I endeavored to interest him in Afghanistan, in India, in social |
| questions, in anything which might take his mind out of the groove. |
| He would always come back to his lost treaty, wondering, guessing, |
| speculating, as to what Holmes was doing, what steps Lord Holdhurst was |
| taking, what news we should have in the morning. As the evening wore on |
| his excitement became quite painful. |
| |
| "You have implicit faith in Holmes?" he asked. |
| |
| "I have seen him do some remarkable things." |
| |
| "But he never brought light into anything quite so dark as this?" |
| |
| "Oh, yes; I have known him solve questions which presented fewer clues |
| than yours." |
| |
| "But not where such large interests are at stake?" |
| |
| "I don't know that. To my certain knowledge he has acted on behalf of |
| three of the reigning houses of Europe in very vital matters." |
| |
| "But you know him well, Watson. He is such an inscrutable fellow that I |
| never quite know what to make of him. Do you think he is hopeful? Do you |
| think he expects to make a success of it?" |
| |
| "He has said nothing." |
| |
| "That is a bad sign." |
| |
| "On the contrary, I have noticed that when he is off the trail he |
| generally says so. It is when he is on a scent and is not quite |
| absolutely sure yet that it is the right one that he is most taciturn. |
| Now, my dear fellow, we can't help matters by making ourselves nervous |
| about them, so let me implore you to go to bed and so be fresh for |
| whatever may await us to-morrow." |
| |
| I was able at last to persuade my companion to take my advice, though I |
| knew from his excited manner that there was not much hope of sleep for |
| him. Indeed, his mood was infectious, for I lay tossing half the night |
| myself, brooding over this strange problem, and inventing a hundred |
| theories, each of which was more impossible than the last. Why had |
| Holmes remained at Woking? Why had he asked Miss Harrison to remain |
| in the sick-room all day? Why had he been so careful not to inform the |
| people at Briarbrae that he intended to remain near them? I cudgelled |
| my brains until I fell asleep in the endeavor to find some explanation |
| which would cover all these facts. |
| |
| It was seven o'clock when I awoke, and I set off at once for Phelps's |
| room, to find him haggard and spent after a sleepless night. His first |
| question was whether Holmes had arrived yet. |
| |
| "He'll be here when he promised," said I, "and not an instant sooner or |
| later." |
| |
| And my words were true, for shortly after eight a hansom dashed up to |
| the door and our friend got out of it. Standing in the window we saw |
| that his left hand was swathed in a bandage and that his face was very |
| grim and pale. He entered the house, but it was some little time before |
| he came upstairs. |
| |
| "He looks like a beaten man," cried Phelps. |
| |
| I was forced to confess that he was right. "After all," said I, "the |
| clue of the matter lies probably here in town." |
| |
| Phelps gave a groan. |
| |
| "I don't know how it is," said he, "but I had hoped for so much from his |
| return. But surely his hand was not tied up like that yesterday. What |
| can be the matter?" |
| |
| "You are not wounded, Holmes?" I asked, as my friend entered the room. |
| |
| "Tut, it is only a scratch through my own clumsiness," he answered, |
| nodding his good-mornings to us. "This case of yours, Mr. Phelps, is |
| certainly one of the darkest which I have ever investigated." |
| |
| "I feared that you would find it beyond you." |
| |
| "It has been a most remarkable experience." |
| |
| "That bandage tells of adventures," said I. "Won't you tell us what has |
| happened?" |
| |
| "After breakfast, my dear Watson. Remember that I have breathed thirty |
| miles of Surrey air this morning. I suppose that there has been no |
| answer from my cabman advertisement? Well, well, we cannot expect to |
| score every time." |
| |
| The table was all laid, and just as I was about to ring Mrs. Hudson |
| entered with the tea and coffee. A few minutes later she brought in |
| three covers, and we all drew up to the table, Holmes ravenous, I |
| curious, and Phelps in the gloomiest state of depression. |
| |
| "Mrs. Hudson has risen to the occasion," said Holmes, uncovering a dish |
| of curried chicken. "Her cuisine is a little limited, but she has |
| as good an idea of breakfast as a Scotch-woman. What have you here, |
| Watson?" |
| |
| "Ham and eggs," I answered. |
| |
| "Good! What are you going to take, Mr. Phelps--curried fowl or eggs, or |
| will you help yourself?" |
| |
| "Thank you. I can eat nothing," said Phelps. |
| |
| "Oh, come! Try the dish before you." |
| |
| "Thank you, I would really rather not." |
| |
| "Well, then," said Holmes, with a mischievous twinkle, "I suppose that |
| you have no objection to helping me?" |
| |
| Phelps raised the cover, and as he did so he uttered a scream, and sat |
| there staring with a face as white as the plate upon which he looked. |
| Across the centre of it was lying a little cylinder of blue-gray paper. |
| He caught it up, devoured it with his eyes, and then danced madly about |
| the room, pressing it to his bosom and shrieking out in his delight. |
| Then he fell back into an arm-chair so limp and exhausted with his own |
| emotions that we had to pour brandy down his throat to keep him from |
| fainting. |
| |
| "There! there!" said Holmes, soothing, patting him upon the shoulder. |
| "It was too bad to spring it on you like this, but Watson here will tell |
| you that I never can resist a touch of the dramatic." |
| |
| Phelps seized his hand and kissed it. "God bless you!" he cried. "You |
| have saved my honor." |
| |
| "Well, my own was at stake, you know," said Holmes. "I assure you it is |
| just as hateful to me to fail in a case as it can be to you to blunder |
| over a commission." |
| |
| Phelps thrust away the precious document into the innermost pocket of |
| his coat. |
| |
| "I have not the heart to interrupt your breakfast any further, and yet I |
| am dying to know how you got it and where it was." |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes swallowed a cup of coffee, and turned his attention to |
| the ham and eggs. Then he rose, lit his pipe, and settled himself down |
| into his chair. |
| |
| "I'll tell you what I did first, and how I came to do it afterwards," |
| said he. "After leaving you at the station I went for a charming walk |
| through some admirable Surrey scenery to a pretty little village called |
| Ripley, where I had my tea at an inn, and took the precaution of filling |
| my flask and of putting a paper of sandwiches in my pocket. There I |
| remained until evening, when I set off for Woking again, and found |
| myself in the high-road outside Briarbrae just after sunset. |
| |
| "Well, I waited until the road was clear--it is never a very frequented |
| one at any time, I fancy--and then I clambered over the fence into the |
| grounds." |
| |
| "Surely the gate was open!" ejaculated Phelps. |
| |
| "Yes, but I have a peculiar taste in these matters. I chose the place |
| where the three fir-trees stand, and behind their screen I got over |
| without the least chance of any one in the house being able to see me. |
| I crouched down among the bushes on the other side, and crawled from one |
| to the other--witness the disreputable state of my trouser knees--until |
| I had reached the clump of rhododendrons just opposite to your bedroom |
| window. There I squatted down and awaited developments. |
| |
| "The blind was not down in your room, and I could see Miss Harrison |
| sitting there reading by the table. It was quarter-past ten when she |
| closed her book, fastened the shutters, and retired. |
| |
| "I heard her shut the door, and felt quite sure that she had turned the |
| key in the lock." |
| |
| "The key!" ejaculated Phelps. |
| |
| "Yes; I had given Miss Harrison instructions to lock the door on the |
| outside and take the key with her when she went to bed. She carried out |
| every one of my injunctions to the letter, and certainly without her |
| cooperation you would not have that paper in you coat-pocket. She |
| departed then and the lights went out, and I was left squatting in the |
| rhododendron-bush. |
| |
| "The night was fine, but still it was a very weary vigil. Of course it |
| has the sort of excitement about it that the sportsman feels when he |
| lies beside the water-course and waits for the big game. It was very |
| long, though--almost as long, Watson, as when you and I waited in that |
| deadly room when we looked into the little problem of the Speckled Band. |
| There was a church-clock down at Woking which struck the quarters, and I |
| thought more than once that it had stopped. At last however about two |
| in the morning, I suddenly heard the gentle sound of a bolt being pushed |
| back and the creaking of a key. A moment later the servants' door was |
| opened, and Mr. Joseph Harrison stepped out into the moonlight." |
| |
| "Joseph!" ejaculated Phelps. |
| |
| "He was bare-headed, but he had a black coat thrown over his shoulder so |
| that he could conceal his face in an instant if there were any alarm. He |
| walked on tiptoe under the shadow of the wall, and when he reached the |
| window he worked a long-bladed knife through the sash and pushed back |
| the catch. Then he flung open the window, and putting his knife through |
| the crack in the shutters, he thrust the bar up and swung them open. |
| |
| "From where I lay I had a perfect view of the inside of the room and of |
| every one of his movements. He lit the two candles which stood upon the |
| mantelpiece, and then he proceeded to turn back the corner of the carpet |
| in the neighborhood of the door. Presently he stopped and picked out a |
| square piece of board, such as is usually left to enable plumbers to get |
| at the joints of the gas-pipes. This one covered, as a matter of |
| fact, the T joint which gives off the pipe which supplies the kitchen |
| underneath. Out of this hiding-place he drew that little cylinder |
| of paper, pushed down the board, rearranged the carpet, blew out the |
| candles, and walked straight into my arms as I stood waiting for him |
| outside the window. |
| |
| "Well, he has rather more viciousness than I gave him credit for, has |
| Master Joseph. He flew at me with his knife, and I had to grasp him |
| twice, and got a cut over the knuckles, before I had the upper hand of |
| him. He looked murder out of the only eye he could see with when we had |
| finished, but he listened to reason and gave up the papers. Having |
| got them I let my man go, but I wired full particulars to Forbes this |
| morning. If he is quick enough to catch his bird, well and good. But |
| if, as I shrewdly suspect, he finds the nest empty before he gets there, |
| why, all the better for the government. I fancy that Lord Holdhurst for |
| one, and Mr. Percy Phelps for another, would very much rather that the |
| affair never got as far as a police-court. |
| |
| "My God!" gasped our client. "Do you tell me that during these long ten |
| weeks of agony the stolen papers were within the very room with me all |
| the time?" |
| |
| "So it was." |
| |
| "And Joseph! Joseph a villain and a thief!" |
| |
| "Hum! I am afraid Joseph's character is a rather deeper and more |
| dangerous one than one might judge from his appearance. From what I |
| have heard from him this morning, I gather that he has lost heavily in |
| dabbling with stocks, and that he is ready to do anything on earth to |
| better his fortunes. Being an absolutely selfish man, when a chance |
| presented itself he did not allow either his sister's happiness or your |
| reputation to hold his hand." |
| |
| Percy Phelps sank back in his chair. "My head whirls," said he. "Your |
| words have dazed me." |
| |
| "The principal difficulty in your case," remarked Holmes, in his |
| didactic fashion, "lay in the fact of there being too much evidence. |
| What was vital was overlaid and hidden by what was irrelevant. Of all |
| the facts which were presented to us we had to pick just those which we |
| deemed to be essential, and then piece them together in their order, so |
| as to reconstruct this very remarkable chain of events. I had already |
| begun to suspect Joseph, from the fact that you had intended to travel |
| home with him that night, and that therefore it was a likely enough |
| thing that he should call for you, knowing the Foreign Office well, upon |
| his way. When I heard that some one had been so anxious to get into the |
| bedroom, in which no one but Joseph could have concealed anything--you |
| told us in your narrative how you had turned Joseph out when you arrived |
| with the doctor--my suspicions all changed to certainties, especially as |
| the attempt was made on the first night upon which the nurse was absent, |
| showing that the intruder was well acquainted with the ways of the |
| house." |
| |
| "How blind I have been!" |
| |
| "The facts of the case, as far as I have worked them out, are these: |
| this Joseph Harrison entered the office through the Charles Street door, |
| and knowing his way he walked straight into your room the instant after |
| you left it. Finding no one there he promptly rang the bell, and at |
| the instant that he did so his eyes caught the paper upon the table. |
| A glance showed him that chance had put in his way a State document of |
| immense value, and in an instant he had thrust it into his pocket and |
| was gone. A few minutes elapsed, as you remember, before the sleepy |
| commissionnaire drew your attention to the bell, and those were just |
| enough to give the thief time to make his escape. |
| |
| "He made his way to Woking by the first train, and having examined his |
| booty and assured himself that it really was of immense value, he |
| had concealed it in what he thought was a very safe place, with the |
| intention of taking it out again in a day or two, and carrying it to the |
| French embassy, or wherever he thought that a long price was to be |
| had. Then came your sudden return. He, without a moment's warning, was |
| bundled out of his room, and from that time onward there were always at |
| least two of you there to prevent him from regaining his treasure. The |
| situation to him must have been a maddening one. But at last he thought |
| he saw his chance. He tried to steal in, but was baffled by your |
| wakefulness. You remember that you did not take your usual draught that |
| night." |
| |
| "I remember." |
| |
| "I fancy that he had taken steps to make that draught efficacious, |
| and that he quite relied upon your being unconscious. Of course, I |
| understood that he would repeat the attempt whenever it could be done |
| with safety. Your leaving the room gave him the chance he wanted. I kept |
| Miss Harrison in it all day so that he might not anticipate us. Then, |
| having given him the idea that the coast was clear, I kept guard as |
| I have described. I already knew that the papers were probably in the |
| room, but I had no desire to rip up all the planking and skirting in |
| search of them. I let him take them, therefore, from the hiding-place, |
| and so saved myself an infinity of trouble. Is there any other point |
| which I can make clear?" |
| |
| "Why did he try the window on the first occasion," I asked, "when he |
| might have entered by the door?" |
| |
| "In reaching the door he would have to pass seven bedrooms. On the other |
| hand, he could get out on to the lawn with ease. Anything else?" |
| |
| "You do not think," asked Phelps, "that he had any murderous intention? |
| The knife was only meant as a tool." |
| |
| "It may be so," answered Holmes, shrugging his shoulders. "I can only |
| say for certain that Mr. Joseph Harrison is a gentleman to whose mercy I |
| should be extremely unwilling to trust." |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Adventure XI. The Final Problem |
| |
| |
| It is with a heavy heart that I take up my pen to write these the last |
| words in which I shall ever record the singular gifts by which my friend |
| Mr. Sherlock Holmes was distinguished. In an incoherent and, as I deeply |
| feel, an entirely inadequate fashion, I have endeavored to give some |
| account of my strange experiences in his company from the chance which |
| first brought us together at the period of the "Study in Scarlet," up |
| to the time of his interference in the matter of the "Naval Treaty"--an |
| interference which had the unquestionable effect of preventing a serious |
| international complication. It was my intention to have stopped there, |
| and to have said nothing of that event which has created a void in my |
| life which the lapse of two years has done little to fill. My hand |
| has been forced, however, by the recent letters in which Colonel James |
| Moriarty defends the memory of his brother, and I have no choice but to |
| lay the facts before the public exactly as they occurred. I alone know |
| the absolute truth of the matter, and I am satisfied that the time has |
| come when no good purpose is to be served by its suppression. As far as |
| I know, there have been only three accounts in the public press: that |
| in the Journal de Geneve on May 6th, 1891, the Reuter's despatch in the |
| English papers on May 7th, and finally the recent letter to which I have |
| alluded. Of these the first and second were extremely condensed, while |
| the last is, as I shall now show, an absolute perversion of the facts. |
| It lies with me to tell for the first time what really took place |
| between Professor Moriarty and Mr. Sherlock Holmes. |
| |
| It may be remembered that after my marriage, and my subsequent start in |
| private practice, the very intimate relations which had existed between |
| Holmes and myself became to some extent modified. He still came to me |
| from time to time when he desired a companion in his investigation, but |
| these occasions grew more and more seldom, until I find that in the year |
| 1890 there were only three cases of which I retain any record. During |
| the winter of that year and the early spring of 1891, I saw in the |
| papers that he had been engaged by the French government upon a matter |
| of supreme importance, and I received two notes from Holmes, dated from |
| Narbonne and from Nimes, from which I gathered that his stay in France |
| was likely to be a long one. It was with some surprise, therefore, that |
| I saw him walk into my consulting-room upon the evening of April 24th. |
| It struck me that he was looking even paler and thinner than usual. |
| |
| "Yes, I have been using myself up rather too freely," he remarked, in |
| answer to my look rather than to my words; "I have been a little pressed |
| of late. Have you any objection to my closing your shutters?" |
| |
| The only light in the room came from the lamp upon the table at which I |
| had been reading. Holmes edged his way round the wall and flinging the |
| shutters together, he bolted them securely. |
| |
| "You are afraid of something?" I asked. |
| |
| "Well, I am." |
| |
| "Of what?" |
| |
| "Of air-guns." |
| |
| "My dear Holmes, what do you mean?" |
| |
| "I think that you know me well enough, Watson, to understand that I am |
| by no means a nervous man. At the same time, it is stupidity rather than |
| courage to refuse to recognize danger when it is close upon you. Might |
| I trouble you for a match?" He drew in the smoke of his cigarette as if |
| the soothing influence was grateful to him. |
| |
| "I must apologize for calling so late," said he, "and I must further beg |
| you to be so unconventional as to allow me to leave your house presently |
| by scrambling over your back garden wall." |
| |
| "But what does it all mean?" I asked. |
| |
| He held out his hand, and I saw in the light of the lamp that two of his |
| knuckles were burst and bleeding. |
| |
| "It is not an airy nothing, you see," said he, smiling. "On the |
| contrary, it is solid enough for a man to break his hand over. Is Mrs. |
| Watson in?" |
| |
| "She is away upon a visit." |
| |
| "Indeed! You are alone?" |
| |
| "Quite." |
| |
| "Then it makes it the easier for me to propose that you should come away |
| with me for a week to the Continent." |
| |
| "Where?" |
| |
| "Oh, anywhere. It's all the same to me." |
| |
| There was something very strange in all this. It was not Holmes's nature |
| to take an aimless holiday, and something about his pale, worn face told |
| me that his nerves were at their highest tension. He saw the question in |
| my eyes, and, putting his finger-tips together and his elbows upon his |
| knees, he explained the situation. |
| |
| "You have probably never heard of Professor Moriarty?" said he. |
| |
| "Never." |
| |
| "Aye, there's the genius and the wonder of the thing!" he cried. "The |
| man pervades London, and no one has heard of him. That's what puts |
| him on a pinnacle in the records of crime. I tell you, Watson, in all |
| seriousness, that if I could beat that man, if I could free society |
| of him, I should feel that my own career had reached its summit, and |
| I should be prepared to turn to some more placid line in life. Between |
| ourselves, the recent cases in which I have been of assistance to the |
| royal family of Scandinavia, and to the French republic, have left me in |
| such a position that I could continue to live in the quiet fashion |
| which is most congenial to me, and to concentrate my attention upon my |
| chemical researches. But I could not rest, Watson, I could not sit quiet |
| in my chair, if I thought that such a man as Professor Moriarty were |
| walking the streets of London unchallenged." |
| |
| "What has he done, then?" |
| |
| "His career has been an extraordinary one. He is a man of good birth and |
| excellent education, endowed by nature with a phenomenal mathematical |
| faculty. At the age of twenty-one he wrote a treatise upon the Binomial |
| Theorem, which has had a European vogue. On the strength of it he won |
| the Mathematical Chair at one of our smaller universities, and had, to |
| all appearances, a most brilliant career before him. But the man had |
| hereditary tendencies of the most diabolical kind. A criminal strain |
| ran in his blood, which, instead of being modified, was increased and |
| rendered infinitely more dangerous by his extraordinary mental powers. |
| Dark rumors gathered round him in the university town, and eventually he |
| was compelled to resign his chair and to come down to London, where he |
| set up as an army coach. So much is known to the world, but what I am |
| telling you now is what I have myself discovered. |
| |
| "As you are aware, Watson, there is no one who knows the higher criminal |
| world of London so well as I do. For years past I have continually been |
| conscious of some power behind the malefactor, some deep organizing |
| power which forever stands in the way of the law, and throws its shield |
| over the wrong-doer. Again and again in cases of the most varying |
| sorts--forgery cases, robberies, murders--I have felt the presence of |
| this force, and I have deduced its action in many of those undiscovered |
| crimes in which I have not been personally consulted. For years I have |
| endeavored to break through the veil which shrouded it, and at last |
| the time came when I seized my thread and followed it, until it led |
| me, after a thousand cunning windings, to ex-Professor Moriarty of |
| mathematical celebrity. |
| |
| "He is the Napoleon of crime, Watson. He is the organizer of half that |
| is evil and of nearly all that is undetected in this great city. He is a |
| genius, a philosopher, an abstract thinker. He has a brain of the first |
| order. He sits motionless, like a spider in the center of its web, but |
| that web has a thousand radiations, and he knows well every quiver of |
| each of them. He does little himself. He only plans. But his agents are |
| numerous and splendidly organized. Is there a crime to be done, a |
| paper to be abstracted, we will say, a house to be rifled, a man to be |
| removed--the word is passed to the Professor, the matter is organized |
| and carried out. The agent may be caught. In that case money is found |
| for his bail or his defence. But the central power which uses the agent |
| is never caught--never so much as suspected. This was the organization |
| which I deduced, Watson, and which I devoted my whole energy to exposing |
| and breaking up. |
| |
| "But the Professor was fenced round with safeguards so cunningly devised |
| that, do what I would, it seemed impossible to get evidence which would |
| convict in a court of law. You know my powers, my dear Watson, and yet |
| at the end of three months I was forced to confess that I had at last |
| met an antagonist who was my intellectual equal. My horror at his crimes |
| was lost in my admiration at his skill. But at last he made a trip--only |
| a little, little trip--but it was more than he could afford when I was |
| so close upon him. I had my chance, and, starting from that point, I |
| have woven my net round him until now it is all ready to close. In three |
| days--that is to say, on Monday next--matters will be ripe, and the |
| Professor, with all the principal members of his gang, will be in the |
| hands of the police. Then will come the greatest criminal trial of the |
| century, the clearing up of over forty mysteries, and the rope for all |
| of them; but if we move at all prematurely, you understand, they may |
| slip out of our hands even at the last moment. |
| |
| "Now, if I could have done this without the knowledge of Professor |
| Moriarty, all would have been well. But he was too wily for that. He saw |
| every step which I took to draw my toils round him. Again and again |
| he strove to break away, but I as often headed him off. I tell you, |
| my friend, that if a detailed account of that silent contest could |
| be written, it would take its place as the most brilliant bit of |
| thrust-and-parry work in the history of detection. Never have I risen to |
| such a height, and never have I been so hard pressed by an opponent. He |
| cut deep, and yet I just undercut him. This morning the last steps were |
| taken, and three days only were wanted to complete the business. I was |
| sitting in my room thinking the matter over, when the door opened and |
| Professor Moriarty stood before me. |
| |
| "My nerves are fairly proof, Watson, but I must confess to a start when |
| I saw the very man who had been so much in my thoughts standing there on |
| my threshhold. His appearance was quite familiar to me. He is extremely |
| tall and thin, his forehead domes out in a white curve, and his two |
| eyes are deeply sunken in his head. He is clean-shaven, pale, and |
| ascetic-looking, retaining something of the professor in his features. |
| His shoulders are rounded from much study, and his face protrudes |
| forward, and is forever slowly oscillating from side to side in a |
| curiously reptilian fashion. He peered at me with great curiosity in his |
| puckered eyes. |
| |
| "'You have less frontal development than I should have expected,' said |
| he, at last. 'It is a dangerous habit to finger loaded firearms in the |
| pocket of one's dressing-gown.' |
| |
| "The fact is that upon his entrance I had instantly recognized the |
| extreme personal danger in which I lay. The only conceivable escape for |
| him lay in silencing my tongue. In an instant I had slipped the revolver |
| from the drawer into my pocket, and was covering him through the cloth. |
| At his remark I drew the weapon out and laid it cocked upon the table. |
| He still smiled and blinked, but there was something about his eyes |
| which made me feel very glad that I had it there. |
| |
| "'You evidently don't know me,' said he. |
| |
| "'On the contrary,' I answered, 'I think it is fairly evident that I do. |
| Pray take a chair. I can spare you five minutes if you have anything to |
| say.' |
| |
| "'All that I have to say has already crossed your mind,' said he. |
| |
| "'Then possibly my answer has crossed yours,' I replied. |
| |
| "'You stand fast?' |
| |
| "'Absolutely.' |
| |
| "He clapped his hand into his pocket, and I raised the pistol from |
| the table. But he merely drew out a memorandum-book in which he had |
| scribbled some dates. |
| |
| "'You crossed my path on the 4th of January,' said he. 'On the 23d you |
| incommoded me; by the middle of February I was seriously inconvenienced |
| by you; at the end of March I was absolutely hampered in my plans; and |
| now, at the close of April, I find myself placed in such a position |
| through your continual persecution that I am in positive danger of |
| losing my liberty. The situation is becoming an impossible one.' |
| |
| "'Have you any suggestion to make?' I asked. |
| |
| "'You must drop it, Mr. Holmes,' said he, swaying his face about. 'You |
| really must, you know.' |
| |
| "'After Monday,' said I. |
| |
| "'Tut, tut,' said he. 'I am quite sure that a man of your intelligence |
| will see that there can be but one outcome to this affair. It is |
| necessary that you should withdraw. You have worked things in such a |
| fashion that we have only one resource left. It has been an intellectual |
| treat to me to see the way in which you have grappled with this affair, |
| and I say, unaffectedly, that it would be a grief to me to be forced |
| to take any extreme measure. You smile, sir, but I assure you that it |
| really would.' |
| |
| "'Danger is part of my trade,' I remarked. |
| |
| "'That is not danger,' said he. 'It is inevitable destruction. You stand |
| in the way not merely of an individual, but of a mighty organization, |
| the full extent of which you, with all your cleverness, have been unable |
| to realize. You must stand clear, Mr. Holmes, or be trodden under foot.' |
| |
| "'I am afraid,' said I, rising, 'that in the pleasure of this |
| conversation I am neglecting business of importance which awaits me |
| elsewhere.' |
| |
| "He rose also and looked at me in silence, shaking his head sadly. |
| |
| "'Well, well,' said he, at last. 'It seems a pity, but I have done |
| what I could. I know every move of your game. You can do nothing before |
| Monday. It has been a duel between you and me, Mr. Holmes. You hope to |
| place me in the dock. I tell you that I will never stand in the dock. |
| You hope to beat me. I tell you that you will never beat me. If you are |
| clever enough to bring destruction upon me, rest assured that I shall do |
| as much to you.' |
| |
| "'You have paid me several compliments, Mr. Moriarty,' said I. 'Let me |
| pay you one in return when I say that if I were assured of the former |
| eventuality I would, in the interests of the public, cheerfully accept |
| the latter.' |
| |
| "'I can promise you the one, but not the other,' he snarled, and so |
| turned his rounded back upon me, and went peering and blinking out of |
| the room. |
| |
| "That was my singular interview with Professor Moriarty. I confess that |
| it left an unpleasant effect upon my mind. His soft, precise fashion |
| of speech leaves a conviction of sincerity which a mere bully could |
| not produce. Of course, you will say: 'Why not take police precautions |
| against him?' the reason is that I am well convinced that it is from his |
| agents the blow will fall. I have the best proofs that it would be so." |
| |
| "You have already been assaulted?" |
| |
| "My dear Watson, Professor Moriarty is not a man who lets the grass grow |
| under his feet. I went out about mid-day to transact some business in |
| Oxford Street. As I passed the corner which leads from Bentinck Street |
| on to the Welbeck Street crossing a two-horse van furiously driven |
| whizzed round and was on me like a flash. I sprang for the foot-path |
| and saved myself by the fraction of a second. The van dashed round by |
| Marylebone Lane and was gone in an instant. I kept to the pavement after |
| that, Watson, but as I walked down Vere Street a brick came down from |
| the roof of one of the houses, and was shattered to fragments at my |
| feet. I called the police and had the place examined. There were slates |
| and bricks piled up on the roof preparatory to some repairs, and they |
| would have me believe that the wind had toppled over one of these. Of |
| course I knew better, but I could prove nothing. I took a cab after that |
| and reached my brother's rooms in Pall Mall, where I spent the day. Now |
| I have come round to you, and on my way I was attacked by a rough with a |
| bludgeon. I knocked him down, and the police have him in custody; but |
| I can tell you with the most absolute confidence that no possible |
| connection will ever be traced between the gentleman upon whose front |
| teeth I have barked my knuckles and the retiring mathematical coach, who |
| is, I dare say, working out problems upon a black-board ten miles away. |
| You will not wonder, Watson, that my first act on entering your rooms |
| was to close your shutters, and that I have been compelled to ask your |
| permission to leave the house by some less conspicuous exit than the |
| front door." |
| |
| I had often admired my friend's courage, but never more than now, as he |
| sat quietly checking off a series of incidents which must have combined |
| to make up a day of horror. |
| |
| "You will spend the night here?" I said. |
| |
| "No, my friend, you might find me a dangerous guest. I have my plans |
| laid, and all will be well. Matters have gone so far now that they can |
| move without my help as far as the arrest goes, though my presence is |
| necessary for a conviction. It is obvious, therefore, that I cannot do |
| better than get away for the few days which remain before the police are |
| at liberty to act. It would be a great pleasure to me, therefore, if you |
| could come on to the Continent with me." |
| |
| "The practice is quiet," said I, "and I have an accommodating neighbor. |
| I should be glad to come." |
| |
| "And to start to-morrow morning?" |
| |
| "If necessary." |
| |
| "Oh yes, it is most necessary. Then these are your instructions, and I |
| beg, my dear Watson, that you will obey them to the letter, for you are |
| now playing a double-handed game with me against the cleverest rogue and |
| the most powerful syndicate of criminals in Europe. Now listen! You |
| will dispatch whatever luggage you intend to take by a trusty messenger |
| unaddressed to Victoria to-night. In the morning you will send for a |
| hansom, desiring your man to take neither the first nor the second which |
| may present itself. Into this hansom you will jump, and you will drive |
| to the Strand end of the Lowther Arcade, handing the address to the |
| cabman upon a slip of paper, with a request that he will not throw it |
| away. Have your fare ready, and the instant that your cab stops, |
| dash through the Arcade, timing yourself to reach the other side at a |
| quarter-past nine. You will find a small brougham waiting close to the |
| curb, driven by a fellow with a heavy black cloak tipped at the collar |
| with red. Into this you will step, and you will reach Victoria in time |
| for the Continental express." |
| |
| "Where shall I meet you?" |
| |
| "At the station. The second first-class carriage from the front will be |
| reserved for us." |
| |
| "The carriage is our rendezvous, then?" |
| |
| "Yes." |
| |
| It was in vain that I asked Holmes to remain for the evening. It was |
| evident to me that he thought he might bring trouble to the roof he was |
| under, and that that was the motive which impelled him to go. With a few |
| hurried words as to our plans for the morrow he rose and came out with |
| me into the garden, clambering over the wall which leads into Mortimer |
| Street, and immediately whistling for a hansom, in which I heard him |
| drive away. |
| |
| In the morning I obeyed Holmes's injunctions to the letter. A hansom was |
| procured with such precaution as would prevent its being one which was |
| placed ready for us, and I drove immediately after breakfast to the |
| Lowther Arcade, through which I hurried at the top of my speed. A |
| brougham was waiting with a very massive driver wrapped in a dark cloak, |
| who, the instant that I had stepped in, whipped up the horse and rattled |
| off to Victoria Station. On my alighting there he turned the carriage, |
| and dashed away again without so much as a look in my direction. |
| |
| So far all had gone admirably. My luggage was waiting for me, and I had |
| no difficulty in finding the carriage which Holmes had indicated, the |
| less so as it was the only one in the train which was marked "Engaged." |
| My only source of anxiety now was the non-appearance of Holmes. The |
| station clock marked only seven minutes from the time when we were |
| due to start. In vain I searched among the groups of travellers and |
| leave-takers for the lithe figure of my friend. There was no sign of |
| him. I spent a few minutes in assisting a venerable Italian priest, who |
| was endeavoring to make a porter understand, in his broken English, |
| that his luggage was to be booked through to Paris. Then, having taken |
| another look round, I returned to my carriage, where I found that the |
| porter, in spite of the ticket, had given me my decrepit Italian friend |
| as a traveling companion. It was useless for me to explain to him that |
| his presence was an intrusion, for my Italian was even more limited than |
| his English, so I shrugged my shoulders resignedly, and continued to |
| look out anxiously for my friend. A chill of fear had come over me, as I |
| thought that his absence might mean that some blow had fallen during the |
| night. Already the doors had all been shut and the whistle blown, when-- |
| |
| "My dear Watson," said a voice, "you have not even condescended to say |
| good-morning." |
| |
| I turned in uncontrollable astonishment. The aged ecclesiastic had |
| turned his face towards me. For an instant the wrinkles were smoothed |
| away, the nose drew away from the chin, the lower lip ceased to protrude |
| and the mouth to mumble, the dull eyes regained their fire, the drooping |
| figure expanded. The next the whole frame collapsed again, and Holmes |
| had gone as quickly as he had come. |
| |
| "Good heavens!" I cried; "how you startled me!" |
| |
| "Every precaution is still necessary," he whispered. "I have reason to |
| think that they are hot upon our trail. Ah, there is Moriarty himself." |
| |
| The train had already begun to move as Holmes spoke. Glancing back, I |
| saw a tall man pushing his way furiously through the crowd, and waving |
| his hand as if he desired to have the train stopped. It was too late, |
| however, for we were rapidly gathering momentum, and an instant later |
| had shot clear of the station. |
| |
| "With all our precautions, you see that we have cut it rather fine," |
| said Holmes, laughing. He rose, and throwing off the black cassock and |
| hat which had formed his disguise, he packed them away in a hand-bag. |
| |
| "Have you seen the morning paper, Watson?" |
| |
| "No." |
| |
| "You haven't' seen about Baker Street, then?" |
| |
| "Baker Street?" |
| |
| "They set fire to our rooms last night. No great harm was done." |
| |
| "Good heavens, Holmes! this is intolerable." |
| |
| "They must have lost my track completely after their bludgeon-man was |
| arrested. Otherwise they could not have imagined that I had returned |
| to my rooms. They have evidently taken the precaution of watching you, |
| however, and that is what has brought Moriarty to Victoria. You could |
| not have made any slip in coming?" |
| |
| "I did exactly what you advised." |
| |
| "Did you find your brougham?" |
| |
| "Yes, it was waiting." |
| |
| "Did you recognize your coachman?" |
| |
| "No." |
| |
| "It was my brother Mycroft. It is an advantage to get about in such a |
| case without taking a mercenary into your confidence. But we must plan |
| what we are to do about Moriarty now." |
| |
| "As this is an express, and as the boat runs in connection with it, I |
| should think we have shaken him off very effectively." |
| |
| "My dear Watson, you evidently did not realize my meaning when I said |
| that this man may be taken as being quite on the same intellectual plane |
| as myself. You do not imagine that if I were the pursuer I should allow |
| myself to be baffled by so slight an obstacle. Why, then, should you |
| think so meanly of him?" |
| |
| "What will he do?" |
| |
| "What I should do?" |
| |
| "What would you do, then?" |
| |
| "Engage a special." |
| |
| "But it must be late." |
| |
| "By no means. This train stops at Canterbury; and there is always at |
| least a quarter of an hour's delay at the boat. He will catch us there." |
| |
| "One would think that we were the criminals. Let us have him arrested on |
| his arrival." |
| |
| "It would be to ruin the work of three months. We should get the big |
| fish, but the smaller would dart right and left out of the net. On |
| Monday we should have them all. No, an arrest is inadmissible." |
| |
| "What then?" |
| |
| "We shall get out at Canterbury." |
| |
| "And then?" |
| |
| "Well, then we must make a cross-country journey to Newhaven, and so |
| over to Dieppe. Moriarty will again do what I should do. He will get on |
| to Paris, mark down our luggage, and wait for two days at the depot. |
| In the meantime we shall treat ourselves to a couple of carpet-bags, |
| encourage the manufactures of the countries through which we travel, and |
| make our way at our leisure into Switzerland, via Luxembourg and Basle." |
| |
| At Canterbury, therefore, we alighted, only to find that we should have |
| to wait an hour before we could get a train to Newhaven. |
| |
| I was still looking rather ruefully after the rapidly disappearing |
| luggage-van which contained my wardrobe, when Holmes pulled my sleeve |
| and pointed up the line. |
| |
| "Already, you see," said he. |
| |
| Far away, from among the Kentish woods there rose a thin spray of smoke. |
| A minute later a carriage and engine could be seen flying along the open |
| curve which leads to the station. We had hardly time to take our place |
| behind a pile of luggage when it passed with a rattle and a roar, |
| beating a blast of hot air into our faces. |
| |
| "There he goes," said Holmes, as we watched the carriage swing and |
| rock over the points. "There are limits, you see, to our friend's |
| intelligence. It would have been a coup-de-maitre had he deduced what I |
| would deduce and acted accordingly." |
| |
| "And what would he have done had he overtaken us?" |
| |
| "There cannot be the least doubt that he would have made a murderous |
| attack upon me. It is, however, a game at which two may play. The |
| question now is whether we should take a premature lunch here, or run |
| our chance of starving before we reach the buffet at Newhaven." |
| |
| |
| We made our way to Brussels that night and spent two days there, moving |
| on upon the third day as far as Strasburg. On the Monday morning Holmes |
| had telegraphed to the London police, and in the evening we found a |
| reply waiting for us at our hotel. Holmes tore it open, and then with a |
| bitter curse hurled it into the grate. |
| |
| "I might have known it!" he groaned. "He has escaped!" |
| |
| "Moriarty?" |
| |
| "They have secured the whole gang with the exception of him. He has |
| given them the slip. Of course, when I had left the country there was no |
| one to cope with him. But I did think that I had put the game in their |
| hands. I think that you had better return to England, Watson." |
| |
| "Why?" |
| |
| "Because you will find me a dangerous companion now. This man's |
| occupation is gone. He is lost if he returns to London. If I read his |
| character right he will devote his whole energies to revenging himself |
| upon me. He said as much in our short interview, and I fancy that he |
| meant it. I should certainly recommend you to return to your practice." |
| |
| It was hardly an appeal to be successful with one who was an |
| old campaigner as well as an old friend. We sat in the Strasburg |
| salle-Ã -manger arguing the question for half an hour, but the same night |
| we had resumed our journey and were well on our way to Geneva. |
| |
| For a charming week we wandered up the Valley of the Rhone, and then, |
| branching off at Leuk, we made our way over the Gemmi Pass, still deep |
| in snow, and so, by way of Interlaken, to Meiringen. It was a lovely |
| trip, the dainty green of the spring below, the virgin white of the |
| winter above; but it was clear to me that never for one instant did |
| Holmes forget the shadow which lay across him. In the homely Alpine |
| villages or in the lonely mountain passes, I could tell by his quick |
| glancing eyes and his sharp scrutiny of every face that passed us, |
| that he was well convinced that, walk where we would, we could not walk |
| ourselves clear of the danger which was dogging our footsteps. |
| |
| Once, I remember, as we passed over the Gemmi, and walked along |
| the border of the melancholy Daubensee, a large rock which had been |
| dislodged from the ridge upon our right clattered down and roared into |
| the lake behind us. In an instant Holmes had raced up on to the ridge, |
| and, standing upon a lofty pinnacle, craned his neck in every direction. |
| It was in vain that our guide assured him that a fall of stones was a |
| common chance in the spring-time at that spot. He said nothing, but |
| he smiled at me with the air of a man who sees the fulfillment of that |
| which he had expected. |
| |
| And yet for all his watchfulness he was never depressed. On the |
| contrary, I can never recollect having seen him in such exuberant |
| spirits. Again and again he recurred to the fact that if he could |
| be assured that society was freed from Professor Moriarty he would |
| cheerfully bring his own career to a conclusion. |
| |
| "I think that I may go so far as to say, Watson, that I have not lived |
| wholly in vain," he remarked. "If my record were closed to-night I could |
| still survey it with equanimity. The air of London is the sweeter for my |
| presence. In over a thousand cases I am not aware that I have ever used |
| my powers upon the wrong side. Of late I have been tempted to look into |
| the problems furnished by nature rather than those more superficial ones |
| for which our artificial state of society is responsible. Your memoirs |
| will draw to an end, Watson, upon the day that I crown my career by |
| the capture or extinction of the most dangerous and capable criminal in |
| Europe." |
| |
| I shall be brief, and yet exact, in the little which remains for me to |
| tell. It is not a subject on which I would willingly dwell, and yet I am |
| conscious that a duty devolves upon me to omit no detail. |
| |
| It was on the 3d of May that we reached the little village of Meiringen, |
| where we put up at the Englischer Hof, then kept by Peter Steiler the |
| elder. Our landlord was an intelligent man, and spoke excellent English, |
| having served for three years as waiter at the Grosvenor Hotel in |
| London. At his advice, on the afternoon of the 4th we set off together, |
| with the intention of crossing the hills and spending the night at the |
| hamlet of Rosenlaui. We had strict injunctions, however, on no account |
| to pass the falls of Reichenbach, which are about half-way up the hill, |
| without making a small detour to see them. |
| |
| It is indeed, a fearful place. The torrent, swollen by the melting snow, |
| plunges into a tremendous abyss, from which the spray rolls up like the |
| smoke from a burning house. The shaft into which the river hurls itself |
| is an immense chasm, lined by glistening coal-black rock, and narrowing |
| into a creaming, boiling pit of incalculable depth, which brims over and |
| shoots the stream onward over its jagged lip. The long sweep of green |
| water roaring forever down, and the thick flickering curtain of spray |
| hissing forever upward, turn a man giddy with their constant whirl and |
| clamor. We stood near the edge peering down at the gleam of the breaking |
| water far below us against the black rocks, and listening to the |
| half-human shout which came booming up with the spray out of the abyss. |
| |
| The path has been cut half-way round the fall to afford a complete view, |
| but it ends abruptly, and the traveler has to return as he came. We had |
| turned to do so, when we saw a Swiss lad come running along it with |
| a letter in his hand. It bore the mark of the hotel which we had just |
| left, and was addressed to me by the landlord. It appeared that within a |
| very few minutes of our leaving, an English lady had arrived who was in |
| the last stage of consumption. She had wintered at Davos Platz, and was |
| journeying now to join her friends at Lucerne, when a sudden hemorrhage |
| had overtaken her. It was thought that she could hardly live a few |
| hours, but it would be a great consolation to her to see an English |
| doctor, and, if I would only return, etc. The good Steiler assured me |
| in a postscript that he would himself look upon my compliance as a very |
| great favor, since the lady absolutely refused to see a Swiss physician, |
| and he could not but feel that he was incurring a great responsibility. |
| |
| The appeal was one which could not be ignored. It was impossible to |
| refuse the request of a fellow-countrywoman dying in a strange land. Yet |
| I had my scruples about leaving Holmes. It was finally agreed, however, |
| that he should retain the young Swiss messenger with him as guide and |
| companion while I returned to Meiringen. My friend would stay some |
| little time at the fall, he said, and would then walk slowly over the |
| hill to Rosenlaui, where I was to rejoin him in the evening. As I turned |
| away I saw Holmes, with his back against a rock and his arms folded, |
| gazing down at the rush of the waters. It was the last that I was ever |
| destined to see of him in this world. |
| |
| When I was near the bottom of the descent I looked back. It was |
| impossible, from that position, to see the fall, but I could see the |
| curving path which winds over the shoulder of the hill and leads to it. |
| Along this a man was, I remember, walking very rapidly. |
| |
| I could see his black figure clearly outlined against the green behind |
| him. I noted him, and the energy with which he walked but he passed from |
| my mind again as I hurried on upon my errand. |
| |
| It may have been a little over an hour before I reached Meiringen. Old |
| Steiler was standing at the porch of his hotel. |
| |
| "Well," said I, as I came hurrying up, "I trust that she is no worse?" |
| |
| A look of surprise passed over his face, and at the first quiver of his |
| eyebrows my heart turned to lead in my breast. |
| |
| "You did not write this?" I said, pulling the letter from my pocket. |
| "There is no sick Englishwoman in the hotel?" |
| |
| "Certainly not!" he cried. "But it has the hotel mark upon it! Ha, it |
| must have been written by that tall Englishman who came in after you had |
| gone. He said--" |
| |
| But I waited for none of the landlord's explanations. In a tingle of |
| fear I was already running down the village street, and making for the |
| path which I had so lately descended. It had taken me an hour to come |
| down. For all my efforts two more had passed before I found myself at |
| the fall of Reichenbach once more. There was Holmes's Alpine-stock still |
| leaning against the rock by which I had left him. But there was no sign |
| of him, and it was in vain that I shouted. My only answer was my own |
| voice reverberating in a rolling echo from the cliffs around me. |
| |
| It was the sight of that Alpine-stock which turned me cold and sick. |
| He had not gone to Rosenlaui, then. He had remained on that three-foot |
| path, with sheer wall on one side and sheer drop on the other, until his |
| enemy had overtaken him. The young Swiss had gone too. He had probably |
| been in the pay of Moriarty, and had left the two men together. And then |
| what had happened? Who was to tell us what had happened then? |
| |
| I stood for a minute or two to collect myself, for I was dazed with the |
| horror of the thing. Then I began to think of Holmes's own methods and |
| to try to practise them in reading this tragedy. It was, alas, only too |
| easy to do. During our conversation we had not gone to the end of the |
| path, and the Alpine-stock marked the place where we had stood. The |
| blackish soil is kept forever soft by the incessant drift of spray, |
| and a bird would leave its tread upon it. Two lines of footmarks were |
| clearly marked along the farther end of the path, both leading away from |
| me. There were none returning. A few yards from the end the soil was |
| all ploughed up into a patch of mud, and the branches and ferns which |
| fringed the chasm were torn and bedraggled. I lay upon my face and |
| peered over with the spray spouting up all around me. It had darkened |
| since I left, and now I could only see here and there the glistening of |
| moisture upon the black walls, and far away down at the end of the shaft |
| the gleam of the broken water. I shouted; but only the same half-human |
| cry of the fall was borne back to my ears. |
| |
| But it was destined that I should after all have a last word of greeting |
| from my friend and comrade. I have said that his Alpine-stock had been |
| left leaning against a rock which jutted on to the path. From the top of |
| this bowlder the gleam of something bright caught my eye, and, raising |
| my hand, I found that it came from the silver cigarette-case which he |
| used to carry. As I took it up a small square of paper upon which it |
| had lain fluttered down on to the ground. Unfolding it, I found that it |
| consisted of three pages torn from his note-book and addressed to me. It |
| was characteristic of the man that the direction was a precise, and the |
| writing as firm and clear, as though it had been written in his study. |
| |
| My dear Watson [it said], I write these few lines through the courtesy |
| of Mr. Moriarty, who awaits my convenience for the final discussion of |
| those questions which lie between us. He has been giving me a sketch |
| of the methods by which he avoided the English police and kept himself |
| informed of our movements. They certainly confirm the very high opinion |
| which I had formed of his abilities. I am pleased to think that I shall |
| be able to free society from any further effects of his presence, though |
| I fear that it is at a cost which will give pain to my friends, and |
| especially, my dear Watson, to you. I have already explained to you, |
| however, that my career had in any case reached its crisis, and that |
| no possible conclusion to it could be more congenial to me than this. |
| Indeed, if I may make a full confession to you, I was quite convinced |
| that the letter from Meiringen was a hoax, and I allowed you to depart |
| on that errand under the persuasion that some development of this sort |
| would follow. Tell Inspector Patterson that the papers which he needs |
| to convict the gang are in pigeonhole M., done up in a blue envelope |
| and inscribed "Moriarty." I made every disposition of my property before |
| leaving England, and handed it to my brother Mycroft. Pray give my |
| greetings to Mrs. Watson, and believe me to be, my dear fellow, |
| |
| Very sincerely yours, |
| |
| Sherlock Holmes |
| |
| |
| A few words may suffice to tell the little that remains. An examination |
| by experts leaves little doubt that a personal contest between the two |
| men ended, as it could hardly fail to end in such a situation, in their |
| reeling over, locked in each other's arms. Any attempt at recovering the |
| bodies was absolutely hopeless, and there, deep down in that dreadful |
| caldron of swirling water and seething foam, will lie for all time the |
| most dangerous criminal and the foremost champion of the law of their |
| generation. The Swiss youth was never found again, and there can be no |
| doubt that he was one of the numerous agents whom Moriarty kept in this |
| employ. As to the gang, it will be within the memory of the public |
| how completely the evidence which Holmes had accumulated exposed their |
| organization, and how heavily the hand of the dead man weighed |
| upon them. Of their terrible chief few details came out during the |
| proceedings, and if I have now been compelled to make a clear statement |
| of his career it is due to those injudicious champions who have |
| endeavored to clear his memory by attacks upon him whom I shall ever |
| regard as the best and the wisest man whom I have ever known. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
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