568 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
568 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
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-----=====Earth's Dreamlands=====-----
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(313)558-5024 {14.4} (313)558-5517
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A BBS for text file junkies
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RPGNet GM File Archive Site
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.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.
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The Adventure of the Retired Colourman
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Sherlock Holmes was in a melancholy and philosophic mood
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that morning. His alert practical nature was subject to such
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reactions.
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"Did you see him?" he asked.
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"You mean the old fellow who has just gone out?"
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"Precisely."
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"Yes, I met him at the door."
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"What did you think of him?"
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"A pathetic, futile, broken creature."
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"Exactly, Watson. Pathetic and futile. But is not all life
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pathetic and futile? Is not his story a microcosm of the whole?
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We reach. We grasp. And what is left in our hands at the end? A
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shadow. Or worse than a shadow -- misery."
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"Is he one of your clients?"
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"Well, I suppose I may call him so. He has been sent on by
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the Yard. Just as medical men occasionally send their incurables
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to a quack. They argue that they can do nothing more, and that
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whatever happens the patient can be no worse than he is."
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"What is the matter?"
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Holmes took a rather soiled card from the table. "Josiah
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Amberley. He says he was junior partner of Brickfall and
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Amberley, who are manufacturers of artistic materials. You will
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see their names upon paint-boxes. He made his little pile, retired
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from business at the age of sixty-one, bought a house at Lewisham.
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and settled down to rest after a life of ceaseless grind. One
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would think his future was tolerably assured."
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"Yes, indeed."
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Holmes glanced over some notes which he had scribbled upon
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the back of an envelope.
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"Retired in 1896, Watson. Early in 1897 he married a woman
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twenty years younger than himself -- a good-looking woman, too.
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if the photograph does not flatter. A competence, a wife, leisure -- it
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seemed a straight road which lay before him. And yet within two
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years he is, as you have seen, as broken and miserable a creature
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as crawls beneath the sun."
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"But what has happened?"
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"The old story, Watson. A treacherous friend and a fickle
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wife. It would appear that Amberley has one hobby in life, and it
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is chess. Not far from him at Lewisham there lives a young
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doctor who is also a chess-player. I have noted his name as Dr.
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Ray Ernest. Ernest was frequently in the house, and an intimacy
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between him and Mrs. Amberley was a natural sequence, for you
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must admit that our unfortunate client has few outward graces,
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whatever his inner virtues may be. The couple went off together
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last week -- destination untraced. What is more, the faithless
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spouse carried off the old man's deed-box as her personal lug-
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gage with a good part of his life's savings within. Can we find
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the lady? Can we save the money? A commonplace problem so
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far as it has developed, and yet a vital one for Josiah Amberley."
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"What will you do about it?"
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"Well, the immediate question, my dear Watson, happens to
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be, What will you do? -- if you will be good enough to under-
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study me. You know that I am preoccupied with this case of the
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two Coptic Patriarchs, which should come to a head to-day. I
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really have not time to go out to Lewisham, and yet evidence
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taken on the spot has a special value. The old fellow was quite
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insistent that I should go, but I explained my difficulty. He is
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prepared to meet a representative."
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"By all means," I answered. "I confess I don't see that I can
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be of much service, but I am willing to do my best." And so it
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was that on a summer afternoon I set forth to Lewisham, little
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dreaming that within a week the affair in which I was engaging
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would be the eager debate of all England.
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It was late that evening before I returned to Baker Street and
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gave an account of my mission. Holmes lay with his gaunt figure
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stretched in his deep chair, his pipe curling forth slow wreaths of
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acrid tobacco, while his eyelids drooped over his eyes so lazily
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that he might almost have been asleep were it not that at any halt
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or questionable passage of my narrative they half lifted, and two
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gray eyes, as bright and keen as rapiers, transfixed me with their
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searching glance.
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"The Haven is the name of Mr. Josiah Amberley's house," I
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explained. "I think it would interest you, Holmes. It is like some
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penurious patrician who has sunk into the company of his inferi-
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ors. You know that particular quarter, the monotonous brick
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streets, the weary suburban highways. Right in the middle of
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them, a little island of ancient culture and comfort, lies this old
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home, surrounded by a high sun-baked wall mottled with lichens
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and topped with moss, the sort of wall --"
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"Cut out the poetry, Watson," said Holmes severely. "I note
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that it was a high brick wall."
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"Exactly. I should not have known which was The Haven had
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I not asked a lounger who was smoking in the street. I have a
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reason for mentioning him. He was a tall, dark, heavily
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moustached, rather military-looking man. He nodded in answer
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to my inquiry and gave me a curiously questioning glance, which
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came back to my memory a little later.
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"I had hardly entered the gateway before I saw Mr. Amberley
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coming down the drive. I only had a glimpse of him this
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morning, and he certainly gave me the impression of a strange
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creature, but when I saw him in full light his appearance was
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even more abnormal."
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"I have, of course, studied it, and yet I should be interested to
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have your impression," said Holmes.
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"He seemed to me like a man who was literally bowed down
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by care. His back was curved as though he carried a heavy
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burden. Yet he was not the weakling that I had at first imagined,
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for his shoulders and chest have the framework of a giant,
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though his figure tapers away into a pair of spindled legs."
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"Left shoe wrinkled, right one smooth."
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"I did not observe that."
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"No, you wouldn't. I spotted his artificial limb. But proceed."
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"I was struck by the snaky locks of grizzled hair which curled
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from under his old straw hat, and his face with its fierce, eager
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expression and the deeply lined features."
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"Very good, Watson. What did he say?"
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"He began pouring out the story of his grievances. We walked
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down the drive together, and of course I took a good look round.
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I have never seen a worse-kept place. The garden was all run-
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ning to seed, giving me an impression of wild neglect in which
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the plants had been allowed to find the way of Nature rather than
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of art. How any decent woman could have tolerated such a state
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of things, I don't know. The house, too, was slatternly to the last
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degree, but the poor man seemed himself to be aware of it and to
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be trying to remedy it, for a great pot of green paint stood in the
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centre of the hall, and he was carrying a thick brush in his left
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hand. He had been working on the woodwork.
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"He took me into his dingy sanctum, and we had a long chat.
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Of course, he was disappointed that you had not come yourself.
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'I hardly expected,' he said, 'that so humble an individual as
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myself, especially after my heavy financial loss, could obtain the
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complete attention of so famous a man as Mr. Sherlock Holmes.'
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"I assured him that the financial question did not arise. 'No
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of course, it is art for art's sake with him,' said he, 'but even on
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the artistic side of crime he might have found something here to
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study. And human nature, Dr. Watson -- the black ingratitude of
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it all! When did I ever refuse one of her requests? Was ever a
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woman so pampered? And that young man -- he might have been
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my own son. He had the run of my house. And yet see how they
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have treated me! Oh, Dr. Watson, it is a dreadful, dreadful
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world!'
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"That was the burden of his song for an hour or more. He
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had, it seems, no suspicion of an intrigue. They lived alone save
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for a woman who comes in by the day and leaves every evening
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at six. On that particular evening old Amberley, wishing to give
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his wife a treat, had taken two upper circle seats at the Haymarket
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Theatre. At the last moment she had complained of a headache
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and had refused to go. He had gone alone. There seemed to be
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no doubt about the fact, for he produced the unused ticket which
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he had taken for his wife."
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"That is remarkable -- most remarkable," said Holmes, whose
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interest in the case seemed to be rising. "Pray continue, Watson.
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I find your narrative most arresting. Did you personally examine
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this ticket? You did not, perchance, take the number?"
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"It so happens that I did," I answered with some pride. "It
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chanced to be my old school number, thirty-one, and so is stuck
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in my head."
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"Excellent, Watson! His seat, then, was either thirty or
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thirty-two."
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"Quite so," I answered with some mystification. "And on
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B row."
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"That is most satisfactory. What else did he tell you?"
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"He showed me his strong-room, as he called it. It really is a
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strong-room -- like a bank -- with iron door and shutter -- burglar-
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proof, as he claimed. However, the woman seems to have had a
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duplicate key, and between them they had carried off some seven
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thousand pounds' worth of cash and securities."
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"Securities! How could they dispose of those?"
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"He said that he had given the police a list and that he hoped
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they would be unsaleable. He had got back from the theatre
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about midnight and found the place plundered, the door and
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window open, and the fugitives gone. There was no letter or
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message, nor has he heard a word since. He at once gave the
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alarm to the police."
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Holmes brooded for some minutes.
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"You say he was painting. What was he painting?"
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"Well, he was painting the passage. But he had already
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painted the door and woodwork of this room I spoke of."
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"Does it not strike you as a strange occupation in the
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circumstances?"
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" 'One must do something to ease an aching heart.' That was
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his own explanation. It was eccentric, no doubt, but he is clearly
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an eccentric man. He tore up one of his wife's photographs in
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my presence -- tore it up furiously in a tempest of passion. 'I
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never wish to see her damned face again,' he shrieked."
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"Anything more, Watson?"
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"Yes, one thing which struck me more than anything else. I
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had driven to the Blackheath Station and had caught my train
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there when, just as it was starting, I saw a man dart into the
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carriage next to my own. You know that I have a quick eye for
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faces, Holmes. It was undoubtedly the tall, dark man whom I
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had addressed in the street. I saw him once more at London
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Bridge, and then I lost him in the crowd. But I am convinced that
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he was following me."
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"No doubt! No doubt!" said Holmes. "A tall, dark, heavily
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moustached man, you say, with gray-tinted sun-glasses?"
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"Holmes, you are a wizard. I did not say so, but he had
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gray-tinted sun-glasses."
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"And a Masonic tie-pin?"
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"Holmes!"
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"Quite simple, my dear Watson. But let us get down to what
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is practical. I must admit to you that the case, which seemed to
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me to be so absurdly simple as to be hardly worth my notice, is
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rapidly assuming a very different aspect. It is true that though in
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your mission you have missed everything of importance, yet
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even those things which have obtruded themselves upon your
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notice give rise to serious thought."
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"What have I missed?"
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"Don't be hurt, my dear fellow. You know that I am quite
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impersonal. No one else would have done better. Some possibly
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not so well. But clearly you have missed some vital points. What
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is the opinion of the neighbours about this man Amberley and his
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wife? That surely is of importance. What of Dr. Ernest? Was he
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the gay Lothario one would expect? With your natural advan-
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tages, Watson, every lady is your helper and accomplice. What
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about the girl at the post-office, or the wife of the greengrocer? I
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can picture you whispering soft nothings with the young lady at
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the Blue Anchor, and receiving hard somethings in exchange.
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All this you have left undone."
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"It can still be done."
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"It has been done. Thanks to the telephone and the help of the
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Yard, I can usually get my essentials without leaving this room.
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As a matter of fact, my information confirms the man's story.
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He has the local repute of being a miser as well as a harsh and
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exacting husband. That he had a large sum of money in that
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strong-room of his is certain. So also is it that young Dr. Ernest,
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an unmarried man, played chess with Amberley, and probably
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played the fool with his wife. All this seems plain sailing, and
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one would think that there was no more to be said -- and yet! --
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and yet!"
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"Where lies the difficulty?"
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"In my imagination, perhaps. Well, leave it there, Watson.
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Let us escape from this weary workaday world by the side door
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of music. Carina sings to-night at the Albert Hall, and we still
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have time to dress, dine, and enjoy."
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In the morning I was up betimes, but some toast crumbs and
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two empty eggshells told me that my companion was earlier still.
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I found a scribbled note upon the table.
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DEAR WATSON:
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There are one or two points of contact which I should
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wish to establish with Mr. Josiah Amberley. When I have
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done so we can dismiss the case -- or not. I would only ask
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you to be on hand about three o'clock, as I conceive it
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possible that I may want you.
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S.H.
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I saw nothing of Holmes all day, but at the hour named he
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returned, grave, preoccupied, and aloof. At such times it was
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wiser to leave him to himself.
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"Has Amberley been here yet?"
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"No."
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"Ah! I am expecting him."
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He was not disappointed, for presently the old fellow arrived
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with a very worried and puzzled expression upon his austere
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face.
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"I've had a telegram, Mr. Holmes. I can make nothing of it."
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He handed it over, and Holmes read it aloud.
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"Come at once without fail. Can give you information as
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to your recent loss.
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"ELMAN.
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"The Vicarage.
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"Dispatched at 2:10 from Little Purlington," said Holmes.
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"Little Purlington is in Essex, I believe, not far from Frinton.
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Well, of course you will start at once. This is evidently from a
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responsible person, the vicar of the place. Where is my Crockford?
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Yes, here we have him: 'J. C. Elman, M. A., Living of Moosmoor
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cum Little Purlington.' Look up the trains, Watson."
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"There is one at 5:20 from Liverpool Street."
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"Excellent. You had best go with him, Watson. He may
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need help or advice. Clearly we have come to a crisis in this
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affair."
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But our client seemed by no means eager to start.
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"It's perfectly absurd, Mr. Holmes," he said. "What can this
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man possibly know of what has occurred? It is waste of time and
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money."
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"He would not have telegraphed to you if he did not know
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something. Wire at once that you are coming."
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"I don't think I shall go."
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Holmes assumed his sternest aspect.
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"It would make the worst possible impression both on the
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police and upon myself, Mr. Amberley, if when so obvious a
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clue arose you should refuse to follow it up. We should feel that
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you were not really in earnest in this investigation."
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Our client seemed horrified at the suggestion.
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"Why, of course I shall go if you look at it in that way," said
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he. "On the face of it, it seems absurd to suppose that this
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parson knows anything, but if you think --"
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"I do think," said Holmes with emphasis, and so we were
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launched upon our journey. Holmes took me aside before we left
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the room and gave me one word of counsel, which showed that
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he considered the matter to be of importance. "Whatever you
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do, see that he really does go," said he. "Should he break away
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or return, get to the nearest telephone exchange and send the
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single word 'Bolted.' I will arrange here that it shall reach me
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wherever I am."
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Little Purlington is not an easy place to reach, for it is on a
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branch line. My remembrance of the journey is not a pleasant
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one, for the weather was hot, the train slow, and my companion
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sullen and silent, hardly talking at all save to make an occasional
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sardonic remark as to the futility of our proceedings. When we at
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last reached the little station it was a two-mile drive before we
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came to the Vicarage, where a big, solemn, rather pompous
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clergyman received us in his study. Our telegram lay before him.
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"Well, gentlemen," he asked, "what can I do for you?"
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"We came," I explained, "in answer to your wire."
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"My wire! I sent no wire."
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"I mean the wire which you sent to Mr. Josiah Amberley
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about his wife and his money."
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"If this is a joke, sir, it is a very questionable one," said the
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vicar angrily. "I have never heard of the gentleman you name,
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and I have not sent a wire to anyone."
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Our client and I looked at each other in amazement.
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"Perhaps there is some mistake," said I; "are there perhaps
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two vicarages? Here is the wire itself, signed Elman and dated
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from the Vicarage."
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"There is only one vicarage, sir, and only one vicar, and this
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wire is a scandalous forgery, the origin of which shall certainly
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be investigated by the police. Meanwhile, I can see no possible
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object in prolonging this interview."
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So Mr. Amberley and I found ourselves on the roadside in
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what seemed to me to be the most primitive village in England.
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We made for the telegraph office, but it was already closed.
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There was a telephone, however, at the little Railway Arms, and
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by it I got into touch with Holmes, who shared in our amazement
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at the result of our journey.
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"Most singular!" said the distant voice. "Most remarkable! I
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much fear, my dear Watson, that there is no return train to-night.
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I have unwittingly condemned you to the horrors of a country
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inn. However, there is always Nature, Watson -- Nature and
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Josiah Amberley -- you can be in close commune with both." I
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heard his dry chuckle as he turned away.
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It was soon apparent to me that my companion's reputation as
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a miser was not undeserved. He had grumbled at the expense of
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the journey, had insisted upon travelling third-class, and was
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now clamorous in his objections to the hotel bill. Next morning,
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when we did at last arrive in London, it was hard to say which of
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us was in the worse humour.
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"You had best take Baker Street as we pass," said I. "Mr.
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Holmes may have some fresh instructions."
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"If they are not worth more than the last ones they are not of
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much use," said Amberley with a malevolent scowl. None the
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less, he kept me company. I had already warned Holmes by
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telegram of the hour of our arrival, but we found a message
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waiting that he was at Lewisham and would expect us there.
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That was a surprise, but an even greater one was to find that he
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was not alone in the sitting-room of our client. A stern-looking,
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impassive man sat beside him, a dark man with gray-tinted
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glasses and a large Masonic pin projecting from his tie.
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"This is my friend Mr. Barker," said Holmes. "He has been
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interesting himself also in your business, Mr. Josiah Amberley,
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though we have been working independently. But we both have
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the same question to ask you!"
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Mr. Amberley sat down heavily. He sensed impending dan-
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ger. I read it in his straining eyes and his twitching features.
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"What is the question, Mr. Holmes?"
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"Only this: What did you do with the bodies?"
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The man sprang to his feet with a hoarse scream. He clawed
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into the air with his bony hands. His mouth was open, and for
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the instant he looked like some horrible bird of prey. In a flash
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we got a glimpse of the real Josiah Amberley, a misshapen
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demon with a soul as distorted as his body. As he fell back into
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his chair he clapped his hand to his lips as if to stifle a cough.
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Holmes sprang at his throat like a tiger and twisted his face
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towards the ground. A white pellet fell from between his gasping
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lips.
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"No short cuts, Josiah Amberley. Things must be done de-
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cently and in order. What about it, Barker?"
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"I have a cab at the door," said our taciturn companion.
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"It is only a few hundred yards to the station. We will go
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together. You can stay here, Watson. I shall be back within half
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an hour."
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The old colourman had the strength of a lion in that great
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trunk of his, but he was helpless in the hands of the two
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experienced man-handlers. Wriggling and twisting he was dragged
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to the waiting cab, and I was left to my solitary vigil in the
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ill-omened house. In less time than he had named, however,
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Holmes was back, in company with a smart young police inspector.
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"I've left Barker to look after the formalities," said Holmes.
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"You had not met Barker, Watson. He is my hated rival upon
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the Surrey shore. When you said a tall dark man it was not
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difficult for me to complete the picture. He has several good
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cases to his credit, has he not, Inspector?"
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"He has certainly interfered several times," the inspector
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answered with reserve.
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"His methods are irregular, no doubt, like my own. The
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irregulars are useful sometimes, you know. You, for example,
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with your compulsory warning about whatever he said being
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used against him, could never have bluffed this rascal into what
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is virtually a confession."
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"Perhaps not. But we get there all the same, Mr. Holmes.
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Don't imagine that we had not formed our own views of this
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case, and that we would not have laid our hands on our man.
|
||
You will excuse us for feeling sore when you jump in with
|
||
methods which we cannot use, and so rob us of the credit."
|
||
"There shall be no such robbery, MacKinnon. I assure you
|
||
that I efface myself from now onward, and as to Barker, he has
|
||
done nothing save what I told him."
|
||
The inspector seemed considerably relieved.
|
||
"That is very handsome of you, Mr. Holmes. Praise or blame
|
||
can matter little to you, but it is very different to us when the
|
||
newspapers begin to ask questions."
|
||
"Quite so. But they are pretty sure to ask questions anyhow,
|
||
so it would be as well to have answers. What will you say, for
|
||
example, when the intelligent and enterprising reporter asks you
|
||
what the exact points were which aroused your suspicion, and
|
||
finally gave you a certain conviction as to the real facts?"
|
||
The inspector looked puzzled.
|
||
"We don't seem to have got any real facts yet, Mr. Holmes.
|
||
You say that the prisoner, in the presence of three witnesses,
|
||
practically confessed by trying to commit suicide, that he had
|
||
murdered his wife and her lover. What other facts have you?"
|
||
"Have you arranged for a search?"
|
||
"There are three constables on their way."
|
||
"Then you will soon get the clearest fact of all. The bodies
|
||
cannot be far away. Try the cellars and the garden. It should not
|
||
take long to dig up the likely places. This house is older than the
|
||
water-pipes. There must be a disused well somewhere. Try your
|
||
luck there."
|
||
"But how did you know of it, and how was it done?"
|
||
"I'll show you first how it was done, and then I will give the
|
||
explanation which is due to you, and even more to my long-
|
||
suffering friend here, who has been invaluable throughout. But,
|
||
first, I would give you an insight into this man's mentality. It is
|
||
a very unusual one -- so much so that I think his destination is
|
||
more likely to be Broadmoor than the scaffold. He has, to a high
|
||
degree, the sort of mind which one associates with the mediaeval
|
||
Italian nature rather than with the modern Briton. He was a
|
||
miserable miser who made his wife so wretched by his niggardly
|
||
ways that she was a ready prey for any adventurer. Such a one
|
||
came upon the scene in the person of this chess-playing doctor.
|
||
Amberley excelled at chess -- one mark, Watson, of a scheming
|
||
mind. Like all misers, he was a jealous man, and his jealousy
|
||
became a frantic mania. Rightly or wrongly, he suspected an
|
||
intrigue. He determined to have his revenge, and he planned it
|
||
with diabolical cleverness. Come here!"
|
||
Holmes led us along the passage with as much certainty as if
|
||
he had lived in the house and halted at the open door of the
|
||
strong-room.
|
||
"Pooh! What an awful smell of paint!" cried the inspector.
|
||
"That was our first clue," said Holmes. "You can thank Dr.
|
||
Watson's observation for that, though he failed to draw the
|
||
inference. It set my foot upon the trail. Why should this man at
|
||
such a time be filling his house with strong odours? Obviously,
|
||
to cover some other smell which he wisfhed to conceal -- some
|
||
guilty smell which would suggest suspicions. Then came the
|
||
idea of a room such as you see here with iron door and shutter -- a
|
||
hermetically sealed room. Put those two facts together, and
|
||
whither do they lead? I could only determine that by examining
|
||
the house myself. I was already certain that the case was serious,
|
||
for I had examined the box-office chart at the Haymarket Theatre --
|
||
another of Dr. Watson's bull's-eyes -- and ascertained that nei-
|
||
ther B thirty nor thirty-two of the upper circle had been occupied
|
||
that night. Therefore, Amberley had not been to the theatre, and
|
||
his alibi fell to the ground. He made a bad slip when he allowed
|
||
my astute friend to notice the number of the seat taken for his
|
||
wife. The question now arose how I might be able to examine
|
||
the house. I sent an agent to the most impossible village I could
|
||
think of, and summoned my man to it at such an hour that he
|
||
could not possibly get back. To prevent any miscarriage, Dr.
|
||
Watson accompanied him. The good vicar's name I took, of
|
||
course, out of my Crockford. Do I make it all clear to you?"
|
||
"It is masterly," said the inspector in an awed voice.
|
||
"There being no fear of interruption I proceeded to burgle the
|
||
house. Burglary has always been an alternative profession had I
|
||
cared to adopt it, and I have little doubt that I should have come
|
||
to the front. Observe what I found. You see the gas-pipe along
|
||
the skirting here. Very good. It rises in the angle of the wall, and
|
||
there is a tap here in the corner. The pipe runs out into the
|
||
strong-room, as you can see, and ends in that plaster rose in the
|
||
centre of the ceiling, where it is concealed by the ornamentation.
|
||
That end is wide open. At any moment by turning the outside tap
|
||
the room could be flooded with gas. With door and shutter
|
||
closed and the tap full on I would not give two minutes of
|
||
conscious sensation to anyone shut up in that little chamber. By
|
||
what devilish device he decoyed them there I do not know, but
|
||
once inside the door they were at his mercy."
|
||
The inspector examined the pipe with interest. "One of our
|
||
officers mentioned the smell of gas," said he, "but of course the
|
||
window and door were open then, and the paint -- or some of
|
||
it -- was already about. He had begun the work of painting the
|
||
day before, according to his story. But what next, Mr. Holmes?"
|
||
"Well, then came an incident which was rather unexpected to
|
||
myself. I was slipping through the pantry window in the early
|
||
dawn when I felt a hand inside my collar, and a voice said:
|
||
'Now, you rascal, what are you doing in there?' When I could
|
||
twist my head round I looked into the tinted spectacles of my
|
||
friend and rival, Mr. Barker. It was a curious foregathering and
|
||
set us both smiling. It seems that he had been engaged by Dr.
|
||
Ray Ernest's family to make some investigations and had come
|
||
to the same conclusion as to foul play. He had watched the house
|
||
for some days and had spotted Dr. Watson as one of the obvi-
|
||
ously suspicious characters who had called there. He could
|
||
hardly arrest Watson, but when he saw a man actually climbing
|
||
out of the pantry window there came a limit to his restraint. Of
|
||
course, I told him how matters stood and we continued the case
|
||
together."
|
||
"Why him? Why not us?"
|
||
"Because it was in my mind to put that little test which
|
||
answered so admirably. I fear you would not have gone so far."
|
||
The inspector smiled.
|
||
"Well, maybe not. I understand that I have your word, Mr.
|
||
Holmes, that you step right out of the case now and that you turn
|
||
all your results over to us."
|
||
"Certainly, that is always my custom."
|
||
"Well, in the name of the force I thank you. It seems a clear
|
||
case, as you put it, and there can't be much difficulty over the
|
||
bodies."
|
||
"I'll show you a grim little bit of evidence," said Holmes,
|
||
"and I am sure Amberley himself never observed it. You'll get
|
||
results, Inspector, by always putting yourself in the other fel-
|
||
low's place, and thinking what you would do yourself. It takes
|
||
some imagination, but it pays. Now, we will suppose that you
|
||
were shut up in this little room, had not two minutes to live, but
|
||
wanted to get even with the fiend who was probably mocking at
|
||
you from the other side of the door. What would you do?"
|
||
"Write a message."
|
||
"Exactly. You would like to tell people how you died. No use
|
||
writing on paper. That would be seen. If you wrote on the wall
|
||
someone might rest upon it. Now, look here! Just above the
|
||
skirting is scribbled with a purple indelible pencil: 'We we --'
|
||
That's all.''
|
||
"What do you make of that?"
|
||
"Well, it's only a foot above the ground. The poor devil was on
|
||
the floor dying when he wrote it. He lost his senses before he
|
||
could finish."
|
||
"He was writing, 'We were murdered.' "
|
||
"That's how I read it. If you find an indelible pencil on the
|
||
body --"
|
||
"We'll look out for it, you may be sure. But those securities?
|
||
Clearly there was no robbery at all. And yet he did possess those
|
||
bonds. We verified that."
|
||
"You may be sure he has them hidden in a safe place. When
|
||
the whole elopement had passed into history, he would suddenly
|
||
discover them and announce that the guilty couple had relented
|
||
and sent back the plunder or had dropped it on the way."
|
||
"You certainly seem to have met every difficulty," said the
|
||
inspector. "Of course, he was bound to call us in, but why he
|
||
should have gone to you I can't understand."
|
||
"Pure swank!" Holmes answered. "He felt so clever and so
|
||
sure of himself that he imagined no one could touch him. He
|
||
could say to any suspicious neighbour, 'Look at the steps I have
|
||
taken. I have consulted not only the police but even Sherlock
|
||
Holmes.' "
|
||
The inspector laughed.
|
||
"We must forgive you your 'even,' Mr. Holmes," said he
|
||
"it's as workmanlike a job as I can remember."
|
||
A couple of days later my friend tossed across to me a copy of
|
||
the bi-weekly North Surrey Observer. Under a series of flaming
|
||
headlines, which began with "The Haven Horror" and ended
|
||
with "Brilliant Police Investigation," there was a packed col-
|
||
umn of print which gave the first consecutive account of the
|
||
affair. The concluding paragraph is typical of the whole. It ran
|
||
thus:
|
||
|
||
The remarkable acumen by which Inspector MacKinnon
|
||
deduced from the smell of paint that some other smell, that
|
||
of gas, for example, might be concealed; the bold deduction
|
||
that the strong-room might also be the death-chamber, and
|
||
the subsequent inquiry which led to the discovery of the
|
||
bodies in a disused well, cleverly concealed by a dog-
|
||
kennel, should live in the history of crime as a standing
|
||
example of the intelligence of our professional detectives.
|
||
|
||
"Well, well, MacKinnon is a good fellow," said Holmes with
|
||
a tolerant smile. "You can file it in our archives, Watson. Some
|
||
day the true story may be told."
|
||
|