The return of Sherlock
The Return of Sherlock Holmes
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle(with the movie).
https://youtu.be/aSnwnhv6LHA
It was in the spring of the year 1894 that all London was
interested, and the fashionable world dismayed, by the murder of the Honourable
Ronald Adair under most unusual and inexplicable circumstances. The public has
already learned those particulars of the crime which came out in the police
investigation; but a good deal was suppressed upon that occasion, since the
case for the prosecution was so overwhelmingly strong that it was not necessary
to bring forward all the facts. Only now, at the end of nearly ten years, am I
allowed to supply those missing links which make up the whole of that
remarkable chain. The crime was of interest in itself, but that interest was as
nothing to me compared to the inconceivable sequel, which afforded me the
greatest shock and surprise of any event in my adventurous life. Even now,
after this long interval, I find myself thrilling as I think of it, and feeling
once more that sudden flood of joy, amazement, and incredulity which utterly
submerged my mind. Let me say to that public which has shown some interest in
those glimpses which I have occasionally given them of the thoughts and actions
of a very remarkable man that they are not to blame me if I have not shared my
knowledge with them, for I should have considered it my first duty to have done
so had I not been barred by a positive prohibition from his own lips, which was
only withdrawn upon the third of last month.
It can be imagined that my close intimacy with Sherlock Holmes
had interested me deeply in crime, and that after his disappearance I never
failed to read with care the various problems which came before the public, and
I even attempted more than once for my own private satisfaction to employ his
methods in their solution, though with indifferent success. There was none,
however, which appealed to me like this tragedy of Ronald Adair. As I read the
evidence at the inquest, which led up to a verdict of willful murder against
some person or persons unknown, I realized more clearly than I had ever done
the loss which the community had sustained by the death of Sherlock Holmes.
There were points about this strange business which would, I was sure, have
specially appealed to him, and the efforts of the police would have been
supplemented, or more probably anticipated, by the trained observation and the
alert mind of the first criminal agent in Europe. All day as I drove upon my
round I turned over the case in my mind, and found no explanation which
appeared to me to be adequate. At the risk of telling a twice-told tale I will
recapitulate the facts as they were known to the public at the conclusion of
the inquest.
The Honourable Ronald Adair was the second son of the Earl of
Maynooth, at that time Governor of one of the Australian Colonies. Adair’s
mother had returned from Australia to undergo the operation for cataract, and
she, her son Ronald, and her daughter Hilda were living together at 427, Park
Lane. The youth moved in the best society, had, so far as was known, no
enemies, and no particular vices. He had been engaged to Miss Edith Woodley, of
Carstairs, but the engagement had been broken off by mutual consent some months
before, and there was no sign that it had left any very profound feeling behind
it. For the rest the man’s life moved in a narrow and conventional circle, for
his habits were quiet and his nature unemotional. Yet it was upon this
easy-going young aristocrat that death came in most strange and unexpected form
between the hours of ten and eleven-twenty on the night of March 30, 1894.
Ronald Adair was fond of cards, playing continually, but never
for such stakes as would hurt him. He was a member of the Baldwin, the
Cavendish, and the Bagatelle card clubs. It was shown that after dinner on the
day of his death he had played a rubber of whist at the latter club. He had
also played there in the afternoon. The evidence of those who had played with
him —Mr. Murray, Sir John Hardy, and Colonel Moran—showed that the game was
whist, and that there was a fairly equal fall of the cards. Adair might have
lost five pounds, but not more. His fortune was a considerable one, and such a
loss could not in any way affect him. He had played nearly every day at one
club or other, but he was a cautious player, and usually rose a winner. It came
out in evidence that in partnership with Colonel Moran he had actually won as
much as four hundred and twenty pounds in a sitting some weeks before from
Godfrey Milner and Lord Balmoral. So much for his recent history, as it came
out at the inquest.
On the evening of the crime he returned from the club exactly
at ten. His mother and sister were out spending the evening with a relation.
The servant deposed that she heard him enter the front room on the second
floor, generally used as his sitting-room. She had lit a fire there, and as it
smoked she had opened the window. No sound was heard from the room until
eleven-twenty, the hour of the return of Lady Maynooth and her daughter.
Desiring to say good-night, she had attempted to enter her son’s room. The door
was locked on the inside, and no answer could be got to their cries and
knocking. Help was obtained and the door forced. The unfortunate young man was
found lying near the table. His head had been horribly mutilated by an
expanding revolver bullet, but no weapon of any sort was to be found in the
room. On the table lay two bank-notes for ten pounds each and seventeen pounds
ten in silver and gold, the money arranged in little piles of varying amount.
There were some figures also upon a sheet of paper with the names of some club
friends opposite to them, from which it was conjectured that before his death
he was endeavouring to make out his losses or winnings at cards.
A minute examination of the circumstances served only to make
the case more complex. In the first place, no reason could be given why the
young man should have fastened the door upon the inside. There was the
possibility that the murderer had done this and had afterwards escaped by the
window. The drop was at least twenty feet, however, and a bed of crocuses in
full bloom lay beneath. Neither the flowers nor the earth showed any sign of
having been disturbed, nor were there any marks upon the narrow strip of grass
which separated the house from the road. Apparently, therefore, it was the
young man himself who had fastened the door. But how did he come by his death?
No one could have climbed up to the window without leaving traces. Suppose a
man had fired through the window, it would indeed be a remarkable shot who
could with a revolver inflict so deadly a wound. Again, Park Lane is a
frequented thoroughfare, and there is a cab-stand within a hundred yards of the
house. No one had heard a shot. And yet there was the dead man, and there the
revolver bullet, which had mushroomed out, as soft-nosed bullets will, and so
inflicted a wound which must have caused instantaneous death. Such were the
circumstances of the Park Lane Mystery, which were further complicated by
entire absence of motive, since, as I have said, young Adair was not known to
have any enemy, and no attempt had been made to remove the money or valuables
in the room.
All day I turned these facts over in my mind, endeavouring to
hit upon some theory which could reconcile them all, and to find that line of
least resistance which my poor friend had declared to be the starting-point of
every investigation. I confess that I made little progress. In the evening I
strolled across the Park, and found myself about six o’clock at the Oxford
Street end of Park Lane. A group of loafers upon the pavements, all staring up
at a particular window, directed me to the house which I had come to see. A
tall, thin man with coloured glasses, whom I strongly suspected of being a
plain-clothes detective, was pointing out some theory of his own, while the
others crowded round to listen to what he said. I got as near him as I could,
but his observations seemed to me to be absurd, so I withdrew again in some
disgust. As I did so I struck against an elderly deformed man, who had been
behind me, and I knocked down several books which he was carrying. I remember
that as I picked them up I observed the title of one of them, “The Origin of
Tree Worship,” and it struck me that the fellow must be some poor bibliophile
who, either as a trade or as a hobby, was a collector of obscure volumes. I
endeavoured to apologize for the accident, but it was evident that these books
which I had so unfortunately maltreated were very precious objects in the eyes
of their owner. With a snarl of contempt he turned upon his heel, and I saw his
curved back and white side-whiskers disappear among the throng.
My observations of No. 427, Park Lane did little to clear up
the problem in which I was interested. The house was separated from the street
by a low wall and railing, the whole not more than five feet high. It was
perfectly easy, therefore, for anyone to get into the garden, but the window
was entirely inaccessible, since there was no water-pipe or anything which
could help the most active man to climb it. More puzzled than ever I retraced
my steps to Kensington. I had not been in my study five minutes when the maid
entered to say that a person desired to see me. To my astonishment it was none
other than my strange old book-collector, his sharp, wizened face peering out
from a frame of white hair, and his precious volumes, a dozen of them at least,
wedged under his right arm.
“You’re surprised to see me, sir,” said he, in a strange,
croaking voice.
I acknowledged that I was.
“Well, I’ve a conscience, sir, and when I chanced to see you
go into this house, as I came hobbling after you, I thought to myself, I’ll
just step in and see that kind gentleman, and tell him that if I was a bit
gruff in my manner there was not any harm meant, and that I am much obliged to
him for picking up my books.”
“You make too much of a trifle,” said I. “May I ask how you
knew who I was?”
“Well, sir, if it isn’t too great a liberty, I am a neighbour
of yours, for you’ll find my little bookshop at the corner of Church Street,
and very happy to see you, I am sure. Maybe you collect yourself, sir; here’s
‘British Birds,’ and ‘Catullus,’ and ‘The Holy War’—a bargain every one of
them. With five volumes you could just fill that gap on that second shelf. It
looks untidy, does it not, sir?”
I moved my head to look at the cabinet behind me. When I
turned again Sherlock Holmes was standing smiling at me across my study table.
I rose to my feet, stared at him for some seconds in utter amazement, and then
it appears that I must have fainted for the first and the last time in my life.
Certainly a grey mist swirled before my eyes, and when it cleared I found my
collar-ends undone and the tingling after-taste of brandy upon my lips. Holmes
was bending over my chair, his flask in his hand.
“My dear Watson,” said the well-remembered
voice, “I owe you a thousand apologies. I had no idea that you would be so
affected.” I gripped him by the arm.
“Holmes!” I cried. “Is it really you? Can it indeed be that
you are alive? Is it possible that you succeeded in climbing out of that awful
abyss?”
“Wait a moment,” said he. “Are you sure that you are really
fit to discuss things? I have given you a serious shock by my unnecessarily
dramatic reappearance.”
“I am all right, but indeed, Holmes, I can hardly believe my
eyes. Good heavens, to think that you—you of all men— should be standing in my
study!” Again I gripped him by the sleeve and felt the thin, sinewy arm beneath
it. “Well, you’re not a spirit, anyhow,” said I. “My dear chap, I am overjoyed
to see you. Sit down and tell me how you came alive out of that dreadful
chasm.”
He sat opposite to me and lit a cigarette in his old
nonchalant manner. He was dressed in the seedy frock-coat of the book merchant,
but the rest of that individual lay in a pile of white hair and old books upon
the table. Holmes looked even thinner and keener than of old, but there was a
dead-white tinge in his aquiline face which told me that his life recently had
not been a healthy one.
“I am glad to stretch myself, Watson,” said he. “It is no joke
when a tall man has to take a foot off his stature for several hours on end.
Now, my dear fellow, in the matter of these explanations we have, if I may ask
for your co-operation, a hard and dangerous night’s work in front of us.
Perhaps it would be better if I gave you an account of the whole situation when
that work is finished.”
“I am full of curiosity. I should much prefer to hear now.”
“You’ll come with me to-night?”
“When you like and where you like.”
“This is indeed like the old days. We shall have time for a
mouthful of dinner before we need go. Well, then, about that chasm. I had no
serious difficulty in getting out of it, for the very simple reason that I
never was in it.”
“You never were in it?”
“No, Watson, I never was in it. My note to you was absolutely
genuine. I had little doubt that I had come to the end of my career when I
perceived the somewhat sinister figure of the late Professor Moriarty standing
upon the narrow pathway which led to safety. I read an inexorable purpose in
his grey eyes. I exchanged some remarks with him, therefore, and obtained his
courteous permission to write the short note which you afterwards received. I
left it with my cigarette-box and my stick and I walked along the pathway,
Moriarty still at my heels. When I reached the end I stood at bay. He drew no
weapon, but he rushed at me and threw his long arms around me. He knew that his
own game was up, and was only anxious to revenge himself upon me. We tottered
together upon the brink of the fall. I have some knowledge, however, of
baritsu, or the Japanese system of wrestling, which has more than once been
very useful to me. I slipped through his grip, and he with a horrible scream
kicked madly for a few seconds and clawed the air with both his hands. But for
all his efforts he could not get his balance, and over he went. With my face
over the brink I saw him fall for a long way. Then he struck a rock, bounded
off, and splashed into the water.”
I listened with amazement to this explanation, which Holmes
delivered between the puffs of his cigarette.
“But the tracks!” I cried. “I saw with my own eyes that two
went down the path and none returned.”
“It came about in this way. The instant that the Professor had
disappeared it struck me what a really extraordinarily lucky chance Fate had
placed in my way. I knew that Moriarty was not the only man who had sworn my
death. There were at least three others whose desire for vengeance upon me
would only be increased by the death of their leader. They were all most
dangerous men. One or other would certainly get me. On the other hand, if all the
world was convinced that I was dead they would take liberties, these men, they
would lay themselves open, and sooner or later I could destroy them. Then it
would be time for me to announce that I was still in the land of the living. So
rapidly does the brain act that I believe I had thought this all out before
Professor Moriarty had reached the bottom of the Reichenbach Fall.
“I stood up and examined the rocky wall behind me. In your
picturesque account of the matter, which I read with great interest some months
later, you assert that the wall was sheer. This was not literally true. A few
small footholds presented themselves, and there was some indication of a ledge.
The cliff is so high that to climb it all was an obvious impossibility, and it
was equally impossible to make my way along the wet path without leaving some
tracks. I might, it is true, have reversed my boots, as I have done on similar
occasions, but the sight of three sets of tracks in one direction would
certainly have suggested a deception. On the whole, then, it was best that I
should risk the climb. It was not a pleasant business, Watson. The fall roared
beneath me. I am not a fanciful person, but I give you my word that I seemed to
hear Moriarty’s voice screaming at me out of the abyss. A mistake would have
been fatal. More than once, as tufts of grass came out in my hand or my foot
slipped in the wet notches of the rock, I thought that I was gone. But I
struggled upwards, and at last I reached a ledge several feet deep and covered
with soft green moss, where I could lie unseen in the most perfect comfort.
There I was stretched when you, my dear Watson, and all your following were
investigating in the most sympathetic and inefficient manner the circumstances
of my death.
“At last, when you had all formed your inevitable and totally
erroneous conclusions, you departed for the hotel and I was left alone. I had
imagined that I had reached the end of my adventures, but a very unexpected
occurrence showed me that there were surprises still in store for me. A huge
rock, falling from above, boomed past me, struck the path, and bounded over
into the chasm. For an instant I thought that it was an accident; but a moment
later, looking up, I saw a man’s head against the darkening sky, and another
stone struck the very ledge upon which I was stretched, within a foot of my
head. Of course, the meaning of this was obvious. Moriarty had not been alone.
A confederate—and even that one glance had told me how dangerous a man that
confederate was— had kept guard while the Professor had attacked me. From a
distance, unseen by me, he had been a witness of his friend’s death and of my
escape. He had waited, and then, making his way round to the top of the cliff,
he had endeavoured to succeed where his comrade had failed.
“I did not take long to think about it, Watson. Again I saw
that grim face look over the cliff, and I knew that it was the precursor of
another stone. I scrambled down on to the path. I don’t think I could have done
it in cold blood. It was a hundred times more difficult than getting up. But I
had no time to think of the danger, for another stone sang past me as I hung by
my hands from the edge of the ledge. Halfway down I slipped, but by the
blessing of God I landed, torn and bleeding, upon the path. I took to my heels,
did ten miles over the mountains in the darkness, and a week later I found
myself in Florence with the certainty that no one in the world knew what had
become of me.
“I had only one confidant—my brother Mycroft. I owe you many
apologies, my dear Watson, but it was all-important that it should be thought I
was dead, and it is quite certain that you would not have written so convincing
an account of my unhappy end had you not yourself thought that it was true.
Several times during the last three years I have taken up my pen to write to
you, but always I feared lest your affectionate regard for me should tempt you
to some indiscretion which would betray my secret. For that reason I turned
away from you this evening when you upset my books, for I was in danger at the
time, and any show of surprise and emotion upon your part might have drawn
attention to my identity and led to the most deplorable and irreparable
results. As to Mycroft, I had to confide in him in order to obtain the money which
I needed. The course of events in London did not run so well as I had hoped,
for the trial of the Moriarty gang left two of its most dangerous members, my
own most vindictive enemies, at liberty. I traveled for two years in Tibet,
therefore, and amused myself by visiting Lhassa and spending some days with the
head Llama. You may have read of the remarkable explorations of a Norwegian
named Sigerson, but I am sure that it never occurred to you that you were
receiving news of your friend. I then passed through Persia, looked in at
Mecca, and paid a short but interesting visit to the Khalifa at Khartoum, the
results of which I have communicated to the Foreign Office. Returning to France
I spent some months in a research into the coal-tar derivatives, which I conducted
in a laboratory at Montpelier, in the South of France. Having concluded this to
my satisfaction, and learning that only one of my enemies was now left in
London, I was about to return when my movements were hastened by the news of
this very remarkable Park Lane Mystery, which not only appealed to me by its
own merits, but which seemed to offer some most peculiar personal
opportunities. I came over at once to London, called in my own person at Baker
Street, threw Mrs. Hudson into violent hysterics, and found that Mycroft had
preserved my rooms and my papers exactly as they had always been. So it was, my
dear Watson, that at two o’clock to-day I found myself in my old arm-chair in
my own old room, and only wishing that I could have seen my old friend Watson
in the other chair which he has so often adorned.”
Such was the remarkable narrative to which I listened on that
April evening—a narrative which would have been utterly incredible to me had it
not been confirmed by the actual sight of the tall, spare figure and the keen,
eager face, which I had never thought to see again. In some manner he had
learned of my own sad bereavement, and his sympathy was shown in his manner
rather than in his words. “Work is the best antidote to sorrow, my dear
Watson,” said he, “and I have a piece of work for us both to-night which, if we
can bring it to a successful conclusion, will in itself justify a man’s life on
this planet.” In vain I begged him to tell me more. “You will hear and see
enough before morning,” he answered. “We have three years of the past to
discuss. Let that suffice until half-past nine, when we start upon the notable
adventure of the empty house.”
It was indeed like old times when, at that hour, I found
myself seated beside him in a hansom, my revolver in my pocket and the thrill
of adventure in my heart. Holmes was cold and stern and silent. As the gleam of
the street-lamps flashed upon his austere features I saw that his brows were
drawn down in thought and his thin lips compressed. I knew not what wild beast
we were about to hunt down in the dark jungle of criminal London, but I was
well assured from the bearing of this master huntsman that the adventure was a
most grave one, while the sardonic smile which occasionally broke through his
ascetic gloom boded little good for the object of our quest.
I had imagined that we were bound for Baker Street, but Holmes
stopped the cab at the corner of Cavendish Square. I observed that as he
stepped out he gave a most searching glance to right and left, and at every
subsequent street corner he took the utmost pains to assure that he was not
followed. Our route was certainly a singular one. Holmes’s knowledge of the
byways of London was extraordinary, and on this occasion he passed rapidly, and
with an assured step, through a network of mews and stables the very existence
of which I had never known. We emerged at last into a small road, lined with
old, gloomy houses, which led us into Manchester Street, and so to Blandford
Street. Here he turned swiftly down a narrow passage, passed through a wooden
gate into a deserted yard, and then opened with a key the back door of a house.
We entered together and he closed it behind us.
The place was pitch-dark, but it was evident to me that it was
an empty house. Our feet creaked and crackled over the bare planking, and my
outstretched hand touched a wall from which the paper was hanging in ribbons.
Holmes’s cold, thin fingers closed round my wrist and led me forwards down a
long hall, until I dimly saw the murky fanlight over the door. Here Holmes
turned suddenly to the right, and we found ourselves in a large, square, empty
room, heavily shadowed in the corners, but faintly lit in the centre from the
lights of the street beyond. There was no lamp near and the window was thick
with dust, so that we could only just discern each other’s figures within. My
companion put his hand upon my shoulder and his lips close to my ear.
“Do you know where we are?” he whispered.
“Surely that is Baker Street,” I answered, staring through the
dim window.
“Exactly. We are in Camden House, which stands opposite to our
own old quarters.”
“But why are we
here?”
“Because it commands so excellent a view of that picturesque
pile. Might I trouble you, my dear Watson, to draw a little nearer to the
window, taking every precaution not to show yourself, and then to look up at
our old rooms—the starting-point of so many of our little adventures? We will
see if my three years of absence have entirely taken away my power to surprise
you.”
I crept forward and looked across at the familiar window. As
my eyes fell upon it I gave a gasp and a cry of amazement. The blind was down
and a strong light was burning in the room. The shadow of a man who was seated
in a chair within was thrown in hard, black outline upon the luminous screen of
0
—
the window. There was no mistaking the poise of the head, the
squareness of the shoulders, the sharpness of the features. The face was turned
half-round, and the effect was that of one of those black silhouettes which our
grandparents loved to frame. It was a perfect reproduction of Holmes. So amazed
was I that I threw out my hand to make sure that the man himself was standing
beside me. He was quivering with silent laughter.
“Well?” said he.
“Good heavens!” I cried. “It is marvelous.”
“I trust that age doth not wither nor custom stale my infinite
variety,’” said he, and I recognized in his voice the joy and pride which the
artist takes in his own creation. “It really is rather like me, is it not?”
“I should be prepared to swear that it was you.”
“The credit of the execution is due to Monsieur Oscar Meunier,
of Grenoble, who spent some days in doing the moulding. It is a bust in wax.
The rest I arranged myself during my visit to Baker Street this afternoon.”
“But why?”
“Because, my dear Watson, I had the strongest
possible reason for wishing certain people to think that I was there when I was
really elsewhere.” “And you thought the rooms were watched?”
“I KNEW that they were watched.”
“By whom?”
“By my old enemies, Watson. By the charming society whose
leader lies in the Reichenbach Fall. You must remember that they knew, and only
they knew, that I was still alive. Sooner or later they believed that I should
come back to my rooms. They watched them continuously, and this morning they
saw me arrive.”
“How do you know?”
“Because I recognized their sentinel when I glanced out of my
window. He is a harmless enough fellow, Parker by name, a garroter by trade,
and a remarkable performer upon the Jew’s harp. I cared nothing for him. But I
cared a great deal for the much more formidable person who was behind him, the
bosom friend of Moriarty, the man who dropped the rocks over the cliff, the
most cunning and dangerous criminal in London. That is the man who is after me
to-night, Watson, and that is the man who is quite unaware that we are after
HIM.”
My friend’s plans were gradually revealing themselves. From
this convenient retreat the watchers were being watched and the trackers
tracked. That angular shadow up yonder was the bait and we were the hunters. In
silence we stood together in the darkness and watched the hurrying figures who
passed and repassed in front of us. Holmes was silent and motionless; but I
could tell that he was keenly alert, and that his eyes were fixed intently upon
the stream of passers-by. It was a bleak and boisterous night, and the wind
whistled shrilly down the long street. Many people were moving to and fro, most
of them muffled in their coats and cravats. Once or twice it seemed to me that
I had seen the same figure before, and I especially noticed two men who
appeared to be sheltering themselves from the wind in the doorway of a house
some distance up the street. I tried to draw my companion’s attention to them,
but he gave a little ejaculation of impatience and continued to stare into the
street. More than once he fidgeted with his feet and tapped rapidly with his
fingers upon the wall. It was evident to me that he was becoming uneasy and
that his plans were not working out altogether as he had hoped. At last, as
midnight approached and the street gradually cleared, he paced up and down the
room in uncontrollable agitation. I was about to make some remark to him when I
raised my eyes to the lighted window and again experienced almost as great a
surprise as before. I clutched Holmes’s arm and pointed upwards.
“The shadow has moved!” I cried.
It was, indeed, no longer the profile, but the back, which was
turned towards us.
Three years had certainly not smoothed the asperities of his temper
or his impatience with a less active intelligence than his own.
“Of course it has moved,” said he. “Am I such a farcical
bungler, Watson, that I should erect an obvious dummy and expect that some of
the sharpest men in Europe would be deceived by it? We have been in this room
two hours, and Mrs. Hudson has made some change in that figure eight times, or
once in every quarter of an hour. She works it from the front so that her
shadow may never be seen. Ah!” He drew in his breath with a shrill, excited
intake. In the dim light I saw his head thrown forward, his whole attitude
rigid with attention. Outside, the street was absolutely deserted. Those two
men might still be crouching in the doorway, but I could no longer see them.
All was still and dark, save only that brilliant yellow screen in front of us
with the black figure outlined upon its centre. Again in the utter silence I
heard that thin, sibilant note which spoke of intense suppressed excitement. An
instant later he pulled me back into the blackest corner of the room, and I
felt his warning hand upon my lips. The fingers which clutched me were
quivering. Never had I known my friend more moved, and yet the dark street
still stretched lonely and motionless before us.
But suddenly I was aware of that which his keener senses had
already distinguished. A low, stealthy sound came to my ears, not from the
direction of Baker Street, but from the back of the very house in which we lay
concealed. A door opened and shut. An instant later steps crept down the passage—steps
which were meant to be silent, but which reverberated harshly through the empty
house. Holmes crouched back against the wall and I did the same, my hand
closing upon the handle of my revolver. Peering through the gloom, I saw the
vague outline of a man, a shade blacker than the blackness of the open door. He
stood for an instant, and then he crept forward, crouching, menacing, into the
room. He was within three yards of us, this sinister figure, and I had braced
myself to meet his spring, before I realized that he had no idea of our
presence. He passed close beside us, stole over to the window, and very softly
and noiselessly raised it for half a foot. As he sank to the level of this
opening the light of the street, no longer dimmed by the dusty glass, fell full
upon his face. The man seemed to be beside himself with excitement. His two
eyes shone like stars and his features were working convulsively. He was an
elderly man, with a thin, projecting nose, a high, bald forehead, and a huge
grizzled moustache. An opera-hat was pushed to the back of his head, and an
evening dress shirt-front gleamed out through his open overcoat. His face was
gaunt and swarthy, scored with deep, savage lines. In his hand he carried what
appeared to be a stick, but as he laid it down upon the floor it gave a
metallic clang. Then from the pocket of his overcoat he drew a bulky object,
and he busied himself in some task which ended with a loud, sharp click, as if
a spring or bolt had fallen into its place. Still kneeling upon the floor he
bent forward and threw all his weight and strength upon some lever, with the
result that there came a long, whirling, grinding noise, ending once more in a
powerful click. He straightened himself then, and I saw that what he held in
his hand was a sort of gun, with a curiously misshapen butt. He opened it at
the breech, put something in, and snapped the breech-block. Then, crouching
down, he rested the end of the barrel upon the ledge of the open window, and I
saw his long moustache droop over the stock and his eye gleam as it peered
along the sights. I heard a little sigh of satisfaction as he cuddled the butt
into his shoulder, and saw that amazing target, the black man on the yellow
ground, standing clear at the end of his fore sight. For an instant he was
rigid and motionless. Then his finger tightened on the trigger. There was a
strange, loud whiz and a long, silvery tinkle of broken glass. At that instant
Holmes sprang like a tiger on to the marksman’s back and hurled him flat upon his
face. He was up again in a moment, and with convulsive strength he seized
Holmes by the throat; but I struck him on the head with the butt of my revolver
and he dropped again upon the floor. I fell upon him, and as I held him my
comrade blew a shrill call upon a whistle. There was the clatter of running
feet upon the pavement, and two policemen in uniform, with one plain-clothes
detective, rushed through the front entrance and into the room.
“That you, Lestrade?” said Holmes.
“Yes, Mr. Holmes. I took the job myself. It’s good to see you
back in London, sir.”
“I think you want a little unofficial help. Three undetected
murders in one year won’t do, Lestrade. But you handled the Molesey Mystery
with less than your usual—that’s to say, you handled it fairly well.”
We had all risen to our feet, our prisoner breathing hard,
with a stalwart constable on each side of him. Already a few loiterers had
begun to collect in the street. Holmes stepped up to the window, closed it, and
dropped the blinds. Lestrade had produced two candles and the policemen had
uncovered their lanterns. I was able at last to have a good look at our
prisoner.
It was a tremendously virile and yet sinister face which was
turned towards us. With the brow of a philosopher above and the jaw of a sensualist
below, the man must have started with great capacities for good or for evil.
But one could not look upon his cruel blue eyes, with their drooping, cynical
lids, or upon the fierce, aggressive nose and the threatening, deep-lined brow,
without reading Nature’s plainest danger-signals. He took no heed of any of us,
but his eyes were fixed upon Holmes’s face with an expression in which hatred
and amazement were equally blended. “You fiend!” he kept on muttering. “You
clever, clever fiend!”
“Ah,
Colonel!” said Holmes, arranging his rumpled collar; “‘journeys end in lovers’
meetings,’ as the old play says. I don’t think I have had the pleasure of
seeing you since you favoured me with those attentions as I lay on the ledge
above the Reichenbach Fall.”
The Colonel still stared at my friend like a man in a trance.
“You cunning, cunning fiend!” was all that he could say.
“I have not introduced you yet,” said Holmes. “This,
gentlemen, is Colonel Sebastian Moran, once of Her Majesty’s Indian Army, and
the best heavy game shot that our Eastern Empire has ever produced. I believe I
am correct, Colonel, in saying that your bag of tigers still remains
unrivalled?”
The fierce old man said nothing, but still glared at my
companion; with his savage eyes and bristling moustache he was wonderfully like
a tiger himself.
“I wonder that my very simple stratagem could deceive so old a
shikari,” said Holmes. “It must be very familiar to you. Have you not tethered
a young kid under a tree, lain above it with your rifle, and waited for the
bait to bring up your tiger? This empty house is my tree and you are my tiger.
You have possibly had other guns in reserve in case there should be several
tigers, or in the unlikely supposition of your own aim failing you. These,” he
pointed around, “are my other guns. The parallel is exact.”
Colonel Moran sprang forward, with a snarl of rage, but the
constables dragged him back. The fury upon his face was terrible to look at.
“I confess that you had one small surprise for me,” said
Holmes. “I did not anticipate that you would yourself make use of this empty
house and this convenient front window. I had imagined you as operating from
the street, where my friend Lestrade and his merry men were awaiting you. With
that exception all has gone as I expected.” Colonel Moran turned to the
official detective.
“You
may or may not have just cause for arresting me,” said he, “but at least there
can be no reason why I should submit to the gibes of this person. If I am in
the hands of the law let things be done in a legal way.”
“Well, that’s reasonable enough,” said Lestrade. “Nothing
further you have to say, Mr. Holmes, before we go?”
Holmes had picked up the powerful air-gun from the floor and
was examining its mechanism.
“An admirable and unique weapon,” said
he, “noiseless and of tremendous power. I knew Von Herder, the blind German
mechanic, who constructed it to the order of the late Professor Moriarty. For
years I have been aware of its existence, though I have never before had the
opportunity of handling it. I commend it very specially to your attention,
Lestrade, and also the bullets which
fit it.”
“You can trust us to look after that, Mr. Holmes,” said
Lestrade, as the whole party moved towards the door. “Anything further to say?”
“Only to ask what charge you intend to prefer?”
“What charge, sir? Why, of course, the attempted murder of Mr.
Sherlock Holmes.”
“Not so, Lestrade. I do not propose to appear in the matter at
all. To you, and to you only, belongs the credit of the remarkable arrest which
you have effected. Yes, Lestrade, I congratulate you! With your usual happy
mixture of cunning and audacity you have got him.”
“Got him! Got whom, Mr. Holmes?”
“The man that the whole force has been seeking in vain—
Colonel Sebastian Moran, who shot the Honourable Ronald Adair with an expanding
bullet from an air-gun through the open window of the second-floor front of No.
427, Park Lane, upon the 30th of last month. That’s the charge, Lestrade. And
now, Watson, if you can endure the draught from a broken window, I think that
half an hour in my study over a cigar may afford you some profitable
amusement.”
Our old chambers had been left unchanged through the
supervision of Mycroft Holmes and the immediate care of Mrs. Hudson. As I
entered I saw, it is true, an unwonted tidiness, but the old landmarks were all
in their place. There were the chemical corner and the acid-stained, dealtopped
table. There upon a shelf was the row of formidable scrap-books and books of
reference which many of our fellow-citizens would have been so glad to burn.
The diagrams, the violincase, and the pipe-rack—even the Persian slipper which
contained the tobacco—all met my eyes as I glanced round me. There were two
occupants of the room— one Mrs. Hudson, who beamed upon us both as we entered;
the other the strange dummy which had played so important a part in the
evening’s adventures. It was a wax-coloured model of my friend, so admirably
done that it was a perfect facsimile. It stood on a small pedestal table with
an old dressing-gown of Holmes’s so draped round it that the illusion from the
street was absolutely perfect.
“I hope you preserved all precautions, Mrs. Hudson?” said
Holmes.
“I went to it on my knees, sir, just as you told me.”
“Excellent. You carried the thing out very well. Did you
observe where the bullet went?”
“Yes, sir. I’m afraid it has spoilt your beautiful bust, for
it passed right through the head and flattened itself on the wall. I picked it
up from the carpet. Here it is!”
Holmes held it out to me. “A soft revolver bullet, as you
perceive, Watson. There’s genius in that, for who would expect to find such a
thing fired from an air-gun. All right, Mrs. Hudson, I am much obliged for your
assistance. And now, Watson, let me see you in your old seat once more, for
there are several points which I should like to discuss with you.”
He had thrown off the seedy frock-coat, and now he was the
Holmes of old in the mouse-coloured dressing-gown which he took from his
effigy.
“The old shikari’s nerves have not lost their steadiness nor
his eyes their keenness,” said he, with a laugh, as he inspected the shattered
forehead of his bust.
“Plumb in the middle of the back of the head
and smack through the brain. He was the best shot in India, and I expect that
there are few better in London. Have you heard the name?” “No, I have not.”
“Well, well, such is fame! But, then, if I remember aright,
you had not heard the name of Professor James Moriarty, who had one of the
great brains of the century. Just give me down my index of biographies from the
shelf.”
He turned over the pages lazily, leaning back in his chair and
blowing great clouds from his cigar.
“My collection of M’s is a fine one,” said he. “Moriarty
himself is enough to make any letter illustrious, and here is Morgan the
poisoner, and Merridew of abominable memory, and Mathews, who knocked out my
left canine in the waiting-room at Charing Cross, and, finally, here is our
friend of to-night.”
He handed over the book, and I read: “MORAN, SEBASTIAN,
COLONEL. Unemployed. Formerly 1st Bengalore Pioneers. Born London, 1840. Son of
Sir Augustus Moran, C.B., once British Minister to Persia. Educated Eton and
Oxford. Served in Jowaki Campaign, Afghan Campaign, Charasiab (despatches),
Sherpur, and Cabul. Author of ‘Heavy Game of the Western Himalayas,’ 1881;
‘Three Months in the Jungle,’ 1884. Address: Conduit Street. Clubs: The
Anglo-Indian, the Tankerville, the Bagatelle Card Club.”
On the margin was written, in Holmes’s precise hand: “The
second most dangerous man in London.”
“This is astonishing,” said I, as I handed back the volume.
“The man’s career is that of an honourable soldier.”
“It is true,” Holmes answered. “Up to a certain point he did
well. He was always a man of iron nerve, and the story is still told in India
how he crawled down a drain after a wounded man-eating tiger. There are some
trees, Watson, which grow to a certain height and then suddenly develop some
unsightly eccentricity. You will see it often in humans. I have a theory that
the individual represents in his development the whole procession of his
ancestors, and that such a sudden turn to good or evil stands for some strong
influence which came into the line of his pedigree. The person becomes, as it
were, the epitome of the history of his own family.”
“It is surely rather fanciful.”
“Well, I don’t insist upon it. Whatever the cause, Colonel
Moran began to go wrong. Without any open scandal he still made India too hot
to hold him. He retired, came to London, and again acquired an evil name. It
was at this time that he was sought out by Professor Moriarty, to whom for a
time he was chief of the staff. Moriarty supplied him liberally with money and
used him only in one or two very high-class jobs which no ordinary criminal
could have undertaken. You may have some recollection of the death of Mrs.
Stewart, of Lauder, in 1887. Not? Well, I am sure Moran was at the bottom of
it; but nothing could be proved. So cleverly was the Colonel concealed that
even when the Moriarty gang was broken up we could not incriminate him. You
remember at that date, when I called upon you in your rooms, how I put up the
shutters for fear of air-guns? No doubt you thought me fanciful. I knew exactly
what I was doing, for I knew of the existence of this remarkable gun, and I
knew also that one of the best shots in the world would be behind it. When we
were in Switzerland he followed us with Moriarty, and it was undoubtedly he who
gave me that evil five minutes on the Reichenbach ledge.
“You may think that I read the papers with some attention
during my sojourn in France, on the look-out for any chance of laying him by
the heels. So long as he was free in London my life would really not have been
worth living. Night and day the shadow would have been over me, and sooner or
later his chance must have come. What could I do? I could not shoot him at
sight, or I should myself be in the dock. There was no use appealing to a
magistrate. They cannot interfere on the strength of what would appear to them
to be a wild suspicion. So I could do nothing. But I watched the criminal news,
knowing that sooner or later I should get him. Then came the death of this
Ronald Adair. My chance had come at last! Knowing what I did, was it not
certain that Colonel Moran had done it? He had played cards with the lad; he
had followed him home from the club; he had shot him through the open window.
There was not a doubt of it. The bul-
lets alone are enough to put his head in a noose. I came over
at once. I was seen by the sentinel, who would, I knew, direct the Colonel’s
attention to my presence. He could not fail to connect my sudden return with
his crime and to be terribly alarmed. I was sure that he would make an attempt
to get me out of the way AT ONCE, and would bring round his murderous weapon
for that purpose. I left him an excellent mark in the window, and, having
warned the police that they might be needed—by the way, Watson, you spotted
their presence in that doorway with unerring accuracy—I took up what seemed to
me to be a judicious post for observation, never dreaming that he would choose
the same spot for his attack. Now, my dear Watson, does anything remain for me
to explain?”
“Yes,” said I. “You have not made it clear what was Colonel
Moran’s motive in murdering the Honourable Ronald Adair.”
“Ah! my dear Watson, there we come into those realms of
conjecture where the most logical mind may be at fault. Each may form his own
hypothesis upon the present evidence, and yours is as likely to be correct as
mine.”
“You have formed one, then?”
“I think that it is not difficult to explain the facts. It
came out in evidence that Colonel Moran and young Adair had between them won a
considerable amount of money. Now, Moran undoubtedly played foul—of that I have
long been aware. I believe that on the day of the murder Adair had discovered
that Moran was cheating. Very likely he had spoken to him privately, and had
threatened to expose him unless he voluntarily resigned his membership of the
club and promised not to play cards again. It is unlikely that a youngster like
Adair would at once make a hideous scandal by exposing a well-known man so much
older than himself. Probably he acted as I suggest. The exclusion from his
clubs would mean ruin to Moran, who lived by his ill-gotten card gains. He
therefore murdered Adair, who at the time was endeavouring to work out how much
money he should himself return, since he could not profit by his partner’s foul
play. He locked the door lest the ladies should surprise him and insist upon
knowing what he was doing with these names and coins. Will it pass?”
“I have no doubt that you have hit upon the truth.”
0
—
“It will be verified or disproved at the trial. Meanwhile,
come what may, Colonel Moran will trouble us no more, the famous air-gun of Von
Herder will embellish the Scotland Yard Museum, and once again Mr. Sherlock
Holmes is free to devote his life to examining those interesting little
problems which the complex life of London so plentifully presents.”
—
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