I find it recorded in my notebook
that it was a bleak and windy day towards the end
of March in the year 1892. Holmes had received
a telegram while we sat at our lunch, and he had scribbled
a reply. He made no remark, but the matter remained
in his thoughts, for he stood in front of the fire
afterwards with a thoughtful face, smoking his pipe,
and casting an occasional glance at the message.
Suddenly he turned upon me with a mischievous twinkle
in his eyes.
“I suppose, Watson, we must
look upon you as a man of letters,” said he.
“How do you define the word ’grotesque’?”
“Strange remarkable,” I suggested.
He shook his head at my definition.
“There is surely something more
than that,” said he; “some underlying
suggestion of the tragic and the terrible. If
you cast your mind back to some of those narratives
with which you have afflicted a long-suffering public,
you will recognize how often the grotesque has deepened
into the criminal. Think of that little affair
of the red-headed men. That was grotesque enough
in the outset, and yet it ended in a desperate attempt
at robbery. Or, again, there was that most grotesque
affair of the five orange pips, which let straight
to a murderous conspiracy. The word puts me on
the alert.”
“Have you it there?” I asked.
He read the telegram aloud.
“Have just had most incredible
and grotesque experience. May I consult you?
“Scott Eccles,
“Post Office, Charing Cross.”
“Man or woman?” I asked.
“Oh, man, of course. No
woman would ever send a reply-paid telegram.
She would have come.”
“Will you see him?”
“My dear Watson, you know how
bored I have been since we locked up Colonel Carruthers.
My mind is like a racing engine, tearing itself to
pieces because it is not connected up with the work
for which it was built. Life is commonplace,
the papers are sterile; audacity and romance seem
to have passed forever from the criminal world.
Can you ask me, then, whether I am ready to look
into any new problem, however trivial it may prove?
But here, unless I am mistaken, is our client.”
A measured step was heard upon the
stairs, and a moment later a stout, tall, gray-whiskered
and solemnly respectable person was ushered into the
room. His life history was written in his heavy
features and pompous manner. From his spats
to his gold-rimmed spectacles he was a Conservative,
a churchman, a good citizen, orthodox and conventional
to the last degree. But some amazing experience
had disturbed his native composure and left its traces
in his bristling hair, his flushed, angry cheeks,
and his flurried, excited manner. He plunged instantly
into his business.
“I have had a most singular
and unpleasant experience, Mr. Holmes,” said
he. “Never in my life have I been placed
in such a situation. It is most improper most
outrageous. I must insist upon some explanation.”
He swelled and puffed in his anger.
“Pray sit down, Mr. Scott Eccles,”
said Holmes in a soothing voice. “May I
ask, in the first place, why you came to me at all?”
“Well, sir, it did not appear
to be a matter which concerned the police, and yet,
when you have heard the facts, you must admit that
I could not leave it where it was. Private detectives
are a class with whom I have absolutely no sympathy,
but none the less, having heard your name ”
“Quite so. But, in the
second place, why did you not come at once?”
Holmes glanced at his watch.
“It is a quarter-past two,”
he said. “Your telegram was dispatched
about one. But no one can glance at your toilet
and attire without seeing that your disturbance dates
from the moment of your waking.”
Our client smoothed down his unbrushed
hair and felt his unshaven chin.
“You are right, Mr. Holmes.
I never gave a thought to my toilet. I was only
too glad to get out of such a house. But I have
been running round making inquiries before I came
to you. I went to the house agents, you know,
and they said that Mr. Garcia’s rent was paid
up all right and that everything was in order at Wisteria
Lodge.”
“Come, come, sir,” said
Holmes, laughing. “You are like my friend,
Dr. Watson, who has a bad habit of telling his stories
wrong end foremost. Please arrange your thoughts
and let me know, in their due sequence, exactly what
those events are which have sent you out unbrushed
and unkempt, with dress boots and waistcoat buttoned
awry, in search of advice and assistance.”
Our client looked down with a rueful
face at his own unconventional appearance.
“I’m sure it must look
very bad, Mr. Holmes, and I am not aware that in my
whole life such a thing has ever happened before.
But will tell you the whole queer business, and when
I have done so you will admit, I am sure, that there
has been enough to excuse me.”
But his narrative was nipped in the
bud. There was a bustle outside, and Mrs. Hudson
opened the door to usher in two robust and official-looking
individuals, one of whom was well known to us as Inspector
Gregson of Scotland Yard, an energetic, gallant, and,
within his limitations, a capable officer. He
shook hands with Holmes and introduced his comrade
as Inspector Baynes, of the Surrey Constabulary.
“We are hunting together, Mr.
Holmes, and our trail lay in this direction.”
He turned his bulldog eyes upon our visitor.
“Are you Mr. John Scott Eccles, of Popham House,
Lee?”
“I am.”
“We have been following you about all the morning.”
“You traced him through the telegram, no doubt,”
said Holmes.
“Exactly, Mr. Holmes.
We picked up the scent at Charing Cross Post-Office
and came on here.”
“But why do you follow me? What do you
want?”
“We wish a statement, Mr. Scott
Eccles, as to the events which let up to the death
last night of Mr. Aloysius Garcia, of Wisteria Lodge,
near Esher.”
Our client had sat up with staring
eyes and every tinge of colour struck from his astonished
face.
“Dead? Did you say he was dead?”
“Yes, sir, he is dead.”
“But how? An accident?”
“Murder, if ever there was one upon earth.”
“Good God! This is awful!
You don’t mean you don’t mean
that I am suspected?”
“A letter of yours was found
in the dead man’s pocket, and we know by it
that you had planned to pass last night at his house.”
“So I did.”
“Oh, you did, did you?”
Out came the official notebook.
“Wait a bit, Gregson,”
said Sherlock Holmes. “All you desire is
a plain statement, is it not?”
“And it is my duty to warn Mr.
Scott Eccles that it may be used against him.”
“Mr. Eccles was going to tell
us about it when you entered the room. I think,
Watson, a brandy and soda would do him no harm.
Now, sir, I suggest that you take no notice of this
addition to your audience, and that you proceed with
your narrative exactly as you would have done had
you never been interrupted.”
Our visitor had gulped off the brandy
and the colour had returned to his face. With
a dubious glance at the inspector’s notebook,
he plunged at once into his extraordinary statement.
“I am a bachelor,” said
he, “and being of a sociable turn I cultivate
a large number of friends. Among these are the
family of a retired brewer called Melville, living
at Abermarle Mansion, Kensington. It was at
his table that I met some weeks ago a young fellow
named Garcia. He was, I understood, of Spanish
descent and connected in some way with the embassy.
He spoke perfect English, was pleasing in his manners,
and as good-looking a man as ever I saw in my life.
“In some way we struck up quite
a friendship, this young fellow and I. He seemed to
take a fancy to me from the first, and within two days
of our meeting he came to see me at Lee. One
thing led to another, and it ended in his inviting
me out to spend a few days at his house, Wisteria
Lodge, between Esher and Oxshott. Yesterday evening
I went to Esher to fulfil this engagement.
“He had described his household
to me before I went there. He lived with a faithful
servant, a countryman of his own, who looked after
all his needs. This fellow could speak English
and did his housekeeping for him. Then there
was a wonderful cook, he said, a half-breed whom he
had picked up in his travels, who could serve an excellent
dinner. I remember that he remarked what a queer
household it was to find in the heart of Surrey, and
that I agreed with him, though it has proved a good
deal queerer than I thought.
“I drove to the place about
two miles on the south side of Esher. The house
was a fair-sized one, standing back from the road,
with a curving drive which was banked with high evergreen
shrubs. It was an old, tumbledown building in
a crazy state of disrepair. When the trap pulled
up on the grass-grown drive in front of the blotched
and weather-stained door, I had doubts as to my wisdom
in visiting a man whom I knew so slightly. He
opened the door himself, however, and greeted me with
a great show of cordiality. I was handed over
to the manservant, a melancholy, swarthy individual,
who led the way, my bag in his hand, to my bedroom.
The whole place was depressing. Our dinner
was tete-a-tete, and though my host did his best to
be entertaining, his thoughts seemed to continually
wander, and he talked so vaguely and wildly that I
could hardly understand him. He continually drummed
his fingers on the table, gnawed his nails, and gave
other signs of nervous impatience. The dinner
itself was neither well served nor well cooked, and
the gloomy presence of the taciturn servant did not
help to enliven us. I can assure you that many
times in the course of the evening I wished that I
could invent some excuse which would take me back
to Lee.
“One thing comes back to my
memory which may have a bearing upon the business
that you two gentlemen are investigating. I thought
nothing of it at the time. Near the end of dinner
a note was handed in by the servant. I noticed
that after my host had read it he seemed even more
distrait and strange than before. He gave up
all pretence at conversation and sat, smoking endless
cigarettes, lost in his own thoughts, but he made
no remark as to the contents. About eleven I
was glad to go to bed. Some time later Garcia
looked in at my door the room was dark
at the time and asked me if I had rung.
I said that I had not. He apologized for having
disturbed me so late, saying that it was nearly one
o’clock. I dropped off after this and slept
soundly all night.
“And now I come to the amazing
part of my tale. When I woke it was broad daylight.
I glanced at my watch, and the time was nearly nine.
I had particularly asked to be called at eight, so
I was very much astonished at this forgetfulness.
I sprang up and rang for the servant. There
was no response. I rang again and again, with
the same result. Then I came to the conclusion
that the bell was out of order. I huddled on
my clothes and hurried downstairs in an exceedingly
bad temper to order some hot water. You can
imagine my surprise when I found that there was no
one there. I shouted in the hall. There
was no answer. Then I ran from room to room.
All were deserted. My host had shown me which
was his bedroom the night before, so I knocked at
the door. No reply. I turned the handle
and walked in. The room was empty, and the bed
had never been slept in. He had gone with the
rest. The foreign host, the foreign footman,
the foreign cook, all had vanished in the night!
That was the end of my visit to Wisteria Lodge.”
Sherlock Holmes was rubbing his hands
and chuckling as he added this bizarre incident to
his collection of strange episodes.
“Your experience is, so far
as I know, perfectly unique,” said he.
“May I ask, sir, what you did then?”
“I was furious. My first
idea was that I had been the victim of some absurd
practical joke. I packed my things, banged the
hall door behind me, and set off for Esher, with my
bag in my hand. I called at Allan Brothers’,
the chief land agents in the village, and found that
it was from this firm that the villa had been rented.
It struck me that the whole proceeding could hardly
be for the purpose of making a fool of me, and that
the main object must be to get out of the rent.
It is late in March, so quarter-day is at hand.
But this theory would not work. The agent was
obliged to me for my warning, but told me that the
rent had been paid in advance. Then I made my
way to town and called at the Spanish embassy.
The man was unknown there. After this I went
to see Melville, at whose house I had first met Garcia,
but I found that he really knew rather less about
him than I did. Finally when I got your reply
to my wire I came out to you, since I gather that you
are a person who gives advice in difficult cases.
But now, Mr. Inspector, I understand, from what you
said when you entered the room, that you can carry
the story on, and that some tragedy had occurred.
I can assure you that every word I have said is the
truth, and that, outside of what I have told you,
I know absolutely nothing about the fate of this man.
My only desire is to help the law in every possible
way.”
“I am sure of it, Mr. Scott
Eccles I am sure of it,” said Inspector
Gregson in a very amiable tone. “I am bound
to say that everything which you have said agrees
very closely with the facts as they have come to our
notice. For example, there was that note which
arrived during dinner. Did you chance to observe
what became of it?”
“Yes, I did. Garcia rolled
it up and threw it into the fire.”
“What do you say to that, Mr. Baynes?”
The country detective was a stout,
puffy, red man, whose face was only redeemed from
grossness by two extraordinarily bright eyes, almost
hidden behind the heavy creases of cheek and brow.
With a slow smile he drew a folded and discoloured
scrap of paper from his pocket.
“It was a dog-grate, Mr. Holmes,
and he overpitched it. I picked this out unburned
from the back of it.”
Holmes smiled his appreciation.
“You must have examined the
house very carefully to find a single pellet of paper.”
“I did, Mr. Holmes. It’s
my way. Shall I read it, Mr. Gregson?”
The Londoner nodded.
“The note is written upon ordinary
cream-laid paper without watermark. It is a quarter-sheet.
The paper is cut off in two snips with a short-bladed
scissors. It has been folded over three times
and sealed with purple wax, put on hurriedly and pressed
down with some flat oval object. It is addressed
to Mr. Garcia, Wisteria Lodge. It says:
“Our own colours, green and
white. Green open, white shut. Main stair,
first corridor, seventh right, green baize. Godspeed.
D.
“It is a woman’s writing,
done with a sharp-pointed pen, but the address is
either done with another pen or by someone else.
It is thicker and bolder, as you see.”
“A very remarkable note,”
said Holmes, glancing it over. “I must
compliment you, Mr. Baynes, upon your attention to
detail in your examination of it. A few trifling
points might perhaps be added. The oval seal
is undoubtedly a plain sleeve-link what
else is of such a shape? The scissors were bent
nail scissors. Short as the two snips are, you
can distinctly see the same slight curve in each.”
The country detective chuckled.
“I thought I had squeezed all
the juice out of it, but I see there was a little
over,” he said. “I’m bound
to say that I make nothing of the note except that
there was something on hand, and that a woman, as
usual was at the bottom of it.”
Mr. Scott Eccles had fidgeted in his
seat during this conversation.
“I am glad you found the note,
since it corroborates my story,” said he.
“But I beg to point out that I have not yet
heard what has happened to Mr. Garcia, nor what has
become of his household.”
“As to Garcia,” said Gregson,
“that is easily answered. He was found
dead this morning upon Oxshott Common, nearly a mile
from his home. His head had been smashed to pulp
by heavy blows of a sandbag or some such instrument,
which had crushed rather than wounded. It is
a lonely corner, and there is no house within a quarter
of a mile of the spot. He had apparently been
struck down first from behind, but his assailant had
gone on beating him long after he was dead. It
was a most furious assault. There are no footsteps
nor any clue to the criminals.”
“Robbed?”
“No, there was no attempt at robbery.”
“This is very painful very
painful and terrible,” said Mr. Scott Eccles
in a querulous voice, “but it is really uncommonly
hard on me. I had nothing to do with my host
going off upon a nocturnal excursion and meeting so
sad an end. How do I come to be mixed up with
the case?”
“Very simply, sir,” Inspector
Baynes answered. “The only document found
in the pocket of the deceased was a letter from you
saying that you would be with him on the night of
his death. It was the envelope of this letter
which gave us the dead man’s name and address.
It was after nine this morning when we reached his
house and found neither you nor anyone else inside
it. I wired to Mr. Gregson to run you down in
London while I examined Wisteria Lodge. Then
I came into town, joined Mr. Gregson, and here we
are.”
“I think now,” said Gregson,
rising, “we had best put this matter into an
official shape. You will come round with us to
the station, Mr. Scott Eccles, and let us have your
statement in writing.”
“Certainly, I will come at once.
But I retain your services, Mr. Holmes. I desire
you to spare no expense and no pains to get at the
truth.”
My friend turned to the country inspector.
“I suppose that you have no
objection to my collaborating with you, Mr. Baynes?”
“Highly honoured, sir, I am sure.”
“You appear to have been very
prompt and businesslike in all that you have done.
Was there any clue, may I ask, as to the exact hour
that the man met his death?”
“He had been there since one
o’clock. There was rain about that time,
and his death had certainly been before the rain.”
“But that is perfectly impossible,
Mr. Baynes,” cried our client. “His
voice is unmistakable. I could swear to it that
it was he who addressed me in my bedroom at that very
hour.”
“Remarkable, but by no means
impossible,” said Holmes, smiling.
“You have a clue?” asked Gregson.
“On the face of it the case
is not a very complex one, though it certainly presents
some novel and interesting features. A further
knowledge of facts is necessary before I would venture
to give a final and definite opinion. By the
way, Mr. Baynes, did you find anything remarkable
besides this note in your examination of the house?”
The detective looked at my friend in a singular way.
“There were,” said he,
“one or two very remarkable things.
Perhaps when I have finished at the police-station
you would care to come out and give me your opinion
of them.”
“I am entirely at your service,”
said Sherlock Holmes, ringing the bell. “You
will show these gentlemen out, Mrs. Hudson, and kindly
send the boy with this telegram. He is to pay
a five-shilling reply.”
We sat for some time in silence after
our visitors had left. Holmes smoked hard, with
his browns drawn down over his keen eyes, and his
head thrust forward in the eager way characteristic
of the man.
“Well, Watson,” he asked,
turning suddenly upon me, “what do you make
of it?”
“I can make nothing of this
mystification of Scott Eccles.”
“But the crime?”
“Well, taken with the disappearance
of the man’s companions, I should say that they
were in some way concerned in the murder and had fled
from justice.”
“That is certainly a possible
point of view. On the face of it you must admit,
however, that it is very strange that his two servants
should have been in a conspiracy against him and should
have attacked him on the one night when he had a guest.
They had him alone at their mercy every other night
in the week.”
“Then why did they fly?”
“Quite so. Why did they
fly? There is a big fact. Another big fact
is the remarkable experience of our client, Scott Eccles.
Now, my dear Watson, is it beyond the limits of human
ingenuity to furnish an explanation which would cover
both of these big facts? If it were one which
would also admit of the mysterious note with its very
curious phraseology, why, then it would be worth accepting
as a temporary hypothesis. If the fresh facts
which come to our knowledge all fit themselves into
the scheme, then our hypothesis may gradually become
a solution.”
“But what is our hypothesis?”
Holmes leaned back in his chair with half-closed eyes.
“You must admit, my dear Watson,
that the idea of a joke is impossible. There
were grave events afoot, as the sequel showed, and
the coaxing of Scott Eccles to Wisteria Lodge had
some connection with them.”
“But what possible connection?”
“Let us take it link by link.
There is, on the face of it, something unnatural
about this strange and sudden friendship between the
young Spaniard and Scott Eccles. It was the
former who forced the pace. He called upon Eccles
at the other end of London on the very day after he
first met him, and he kept in close touch with him
until he got him down to Esher. Now, what did
he want with Eccles? What could Eccles supply?
I see no charm in the man. He is not particularly
intelligent not a man likely to be congenial
to a quick-witted Latin. Why, then, was he picked
out from all the other people whom Garcia met as particularly
suited to his purpose? Has he any one outstanding
quality? I say that he has. He is the very
type of conventional British respectability, and the
very man as a witness to impress another Briton.
You saw yourself how neither of the inspectors dreamed
of questioning his statement, extraordinary as it was.”
“But what was he to witness?”
“Nothing, as things turned out,
but everything had they gone another way. That
is how I read the matter.”
“I see, he might have proved an alibi.”
“Exactly, my dear Watson; he
might have proved an alibi. We will suppose,
for argument’s sake, that the household of Wisteria
Lodge are confederates in some design. The attempt,
whatever it may be, is to come off, we will say, before
one o’clock. By some juggling of the clocks
it is quite possible that they may have got Scott Eccles
to bed earlier than he thought, but in any case it
is likely that when Garcia went out of his way to
tell him that it was one it was really not more than
twelve. If Garcia could do whatever he had to
do and be back by the hour mentioned he had evidently
a powerful reply to any accusation. Here was
this irreproachable Englishman ready to swear in any
court of law that the accused was in the house all
the time. It was an insurance against the worst.”
“Yes, yes, I see that. But how about the
disappearance of the others?”
“I have not all my facts yet,
but I do not think there are any insuperable difficulties.
Still, it is an error to argue in front of your data.
You find yourself insensibly twisting them round to
fit your theories.”
“And the message?”
“How did it run? ‘Our
own colours, green and white.’ Sounds like
racing. ‘Green open, white shut.’
That is clearly a signal. ’Main stair,
first corridor, seventh right, green baize.’
This is an assignation. We may find a jealous
husband at the bottom of it all. It was clearly
a dangerous quest. She would not have said ‘Godspeed’
had it not been so. ’D’ that
should be a guide.”
“The man was a Spaniard.
I suggest that ‘D’ stands for Dolores,
a common female name in Spain.”
“Good, Watson, very good but
quite inadmissable. A Spaniard would write to
a Spaniard in Spanish. The writer of this note
is certainly English. Well, we can only possess
our soul in patience until this excellent inspector
come back for us. Meanwhile we can thank our lucky
fate which has rescued us for a few short hours from
the insufferable fatigues of idleness.”
An answer had arrived to Holmes’s
telegram before our Surrey officer had returned.
Holmes read it and was about to place it in his notebook
when he caught a glimpse of my expectant face.
He tossed it across with a laugh.
“We are moving in exalted circles,” said
he.
The telegram was a list of names and addresses:
Lord Harringby, The Dingle; Sir George
Ffolliott, Oxshott Towers; Mr. Hynes Hynes, J.P.,
Purdley Place; Mr. James Baker Williams, Forton Old
Hall; Mr. Henderson, High Gable; Rev. Joshua Stone,
Nether Walsling.
“This is a very obvious way
of limiting our field of operations,” said Holmes.
“No doubt Baynes, with his methodical mind,
has already adopted some similar plan.”
“I don’t quite understand.”
“Well, my dear fellow, we have
already arrived at the conclusion that the massage
received by Garcia at dinner was an appointment or
an assignation. Now, if the obvious reading
of it is correct, and in order to keep the tryst one
has to ascend a main stair and seek the seventh door
in a corridor, it is perfectly clear that the house
is a very large one. It is equally certain that
this house cannot be more than a mile or two from
Oxshott, since Garcia was walking in that direction
and hoped, according to my reading of the facts, to
be back in Wisteria Lodge in time to avail himself
of an alibi, which would only be valid up to one o’clock.
As the number of large houses close to Oxshott must
be limited, I adopted the obvious method of sending
to the agents mentioned by Scott Eccles and obtaining
a list of them. Here they are in this telegram,
and the other end of our tangled skein must lie among
them.”
It was nearly six o’clock before
we found ourselves in the pretty Surrey village of
Esher, with Inspector Baynes as our companion.
Holmes and I had taken things for
the night, and found comfortable quarters at the Bull.
Finally we set out in the company of the detective
on our visit to Wisteria Lodge. It was a cold,
dark March evening, with a sharp wind and a fine rain
beating upon our faces, a fit setting for the wild
common over which our road passed and the tragic goal
to which it led us.
A cold and melancholy walk of a couple
of miles brought us to a high wooden gate, which opened
into a gloomy avenue of chestnuts. The curved
and shadowed drive led us to a low, dark house, pitch-black
against a slate-coloured sky. From the front
window upon the left of the door there peeped a glimmer
of a feeble light.
“There’s a constable in
possession,” said Baynes. “I’ll
knock at the window.” He stepped across
the grass plot and tapped with his hand on the pane.
Through the fogged glass I dimly saw a man spring
up from a chair beside the fire, and heard a sharp
cry from within the room. An instant later a
white-faced, hard-breathing policeman had opened the
door, the candle wavering in his trembling hand.
“What’s the matter, Walters?” asked
Baynes sharply.
The man mopped his forehead with his
handkerchief and agave a long sigh of relief.
“I am glad you have come, sir.
It has been a long evening, and I don’t think
my nerve is as good as it was.”
“Your nerve, Walters?
I should not have thought you had a nerve in your
body.”
“Well, sir, it’s this
lonely, silent house and the queer thing in the kitchen.
Then when you tapped at the window I thought it had
come again.”
“That what had come again?”
“The devil, sir, for all I know. It was
at the window.”
“What was at the window, and when?”
“It was just about two hours
ago. The light was just fading. I was
sitting reading in the chair. I don’t know
what made me look up, but there was a face looking
in at me through the lower pane. Lord, sir, what
a face it was! I’ll see it in my dreams.”
“Tut, tut, Walters. This is not talk for
a police-constable.”
“I know, sir, I know; but it
shook me, sir, and there’s no use to deny it.
It wasn’t black, sir, nor was it white, nor
any colour that I know but a kind of queer shade like
clay with a splash of milk in it. Then there
was the size of it it was twice yours, sir.
And the look of it the great staring goggle
eyes, and the line of white teeth like a hungry beast.
I tell you, sir, I couldn’t move a finger, nor
get my breath, till it whisked away and was gone.
Out I ran and through the shrubbery, but thank God
there was no one there.”
“If I didn’t know you
were a good man, Walters, I should put a black mark
against you for this. If it were the devil himself
a constable on duty should never thank God that he
could not lay his hands upon him. I suppose the
whole thing is not a vision and a touch of nerves?”
“That, at least, is very easily
settled,” said Holmes, lighting his little pocket
lantern. “Yes,” he reported, after
a short examination of the grass bed, “a number
twelve shoe, I should say. If he was all on
the same scale as his foot he must certainly have been
a giant.”
“What became of him?”
“He seems to have broken through the shrubbery
and made for the road.”
“Well,” said the inspector
with a grave and thoughtful face, “whoever he
may have been, and whatever he may have wanted, he’s
gone for the present, and we have more immediate things
to attend to. Now, Mr. Holmes, with your permission,
I will show you round the house.”
The various bedrooms and sitting-rooms
had yielded nothing to a careful search. Apparently
the tenants had brought little or nothing with them,
and all the furniture down to the smallest details
had been taken over with the house. A good deal
of clothing with the stamp of Marx and Co., High Holborn,
had been left behind. Telegraphic inquiries had
been already made which showed that Marx knew nothing
of his customer save that he was a good payer.
Odds and ends, some pipes, a few novels, two of them
in Spanish, and old-fashioned pinfire revolver, and
a guitar were among the personal property.
“Nothing in all this,”
said Baynes, stalking, candle in hand, from room to
room. “But now, Mr. Holmes, I invite your
attention to the kitchen.”
It was a gloomy, high-ceilinged room
at the back of the house, with a straw litter in one
corner, which served apparently as a bed for the cook.
The table was piled with half-eaten dishes and dirty
plates, the debris of last night’s dinner.
“Look at this,” said Baynes. “What
do you make of it?”
He held up his candle before an extraordinary
object which stood at the back of the dresser.
It was so wrinkled and shrunken and withered that
it was difficult to say what it might have been.
One could but say that it was black and leathery and
that it bore some resemblance to a dwarfish, human
figure. At first, as I examined it, I thought
that it was a mummified negro baby, and then it seemed
a very twisted and ancient monkey. Finally I
was left in doubt as to whether it was animal or human.
A double band of white shells were strung round the
centre of it.
“Very interesting very
interesting, indeed!” said Holmes, peering at
this sinister relic. “Anything more?”
In silence Baynes led the way to the
sink and held forward his candle. The limbs and
body of some large, white bird, torn savagely to pieces
with the feathers still on, were littered all over
it. Holmes pointed to the wattles on the severed
head.
“A white cock,” said he.
“Most interesting! It is really a very
curious case.”
But Mr. Baynes had kept his most sinister
exhibit to the last. From under the sink he drew
a zinc pail which contained a quantity of blood.
Then from the table he took a platter heaped with small
pieces of charred bone.
“Something has been killed and
something has been burned. We raked all these
out of the fire. We had a doctor in this morning.
He says that they are not human.”
Holmes smiled and rubbed his hands.
“I must congratulate you, Inspector,
on handling so distinctive and instructive a case.
Your powers, if I may say so without offence, seem
superior to your opportunities.”
Inspector Baynes’s small eyes twinkled with
pleasure.
“You’re right, Mr. Holmes.
We stagnate in the provinces. A case of this
sort gives a man a chance, and I hope that I shall
take it. What do you make of these bones?”
“A lamb, I should say, or a kid.”
“And the white cock?”
“Curious, Mr. Baynes, very curious. I
should say almost unique.”
“Yes, sir, there must have been
some very strange people with some very strange ways
in this house. One of them is dead. Did
his companions follow him and kill him? If they
did we should have them, for every port is watched.
But my own views are different. Yes, sir, my
own views are very different.”
“You have a theory then?”
“And I’ll work it myself,
Mr. Holmes. It’s only due to my own credit
to do so. Your name is made, but I have still
to make mine. I should be glad to be able to
say afterwards that I had solved it without your help.”
Holmes laughed good-humoredly.
“Well, well, Inspector,”
said he. “Do you follow your path and I
will follow mine. My results are always very
much at your service if you care to apply to me for
them. I think that I have seen all that I wish
in this house, and that my time may be more profitably
employed elsewhere. Au revoir and good luck!”
I could tell by numerous subtle signs,
which might have been lost upon anyone but myself,
that Holmes was on a hot scent. As impassive
as ever to the casual observer, there were none the
less a subdued eagerness and suggestion of tension
in his brightened eyes and brisker manner which assured
me that the game was afoot. After his habit he
said nothing, and after mine I asked no questions.
Sufficient for me to share the sport and lend my
humble help to the capture without distracting that
intent brain with needless interruption. All
would come round to me in due time.
I waited, therefore but
to my ever-deepening disappointment I waited in vain.
Day succeeded day, and my friend took no step forward.
One morning he spent in town, and I learned from
a casual reference that he had visited the British
Museum. Save for this one excursion, he spent
his days in long and often solitary walks, or in chatting
with a number of village gossips whose acquaintance
he had cultivated.
“I’m sure, Watson, a week
in the country will be invaluable to you,” he
remarked. “It is very pleasant to see the
first green shoots upon the hedges and the catkins
on the hazels once again. With a spud, a tin
box, and an elementary book on botany, there are instructive
days to be spent.” He prowled about with
this equipment himself, but it was a poor show of
plants which he would bring back of an evening.
Occasionally in our rambles we came
across Inspector Baynes. His fat, red face wreathed
itself in smiles and his small eyes glittered as he
greeted my companion. He said little about the
case, but from that little we gathered that he also
was not dissatisfied at the course of events.
I must admit, however, that I was somewhat surprised
when, some five days after the crime, I opened my
morning paper to find in large letters:
THE OXSHOTT MYSTERY
A SOLUTION
ARREST OF
SUPPOSED ASSASSIN
Holmes sprang in his chair as if he
had been stung when I read the headlines.
“By Jove!” he cried.
“You don’t mean that Baynes has got him?”
“Apparently,” said I as I read the following
report:
“Great excitement was caused
in Esher and the neighbouring district when it was
learned late last night that an arrest had been effected
in connection with the Oxshott murder. It will
be remembered that Mr. Garcia, of Wisteria Lodge,
was found dead on Oxshott Common, his body showing
signs of extreme violence, and that on the same night
his servant and his cook fled, which appeared to show
their participation in the crime. It was suggested,
but never proved, that the deceased gentleman may
have had valuables in the house, and that their abstraction
was the motive of the crime. Every effort was
made by Inspector Baynes, who has the case in hand,
to ascertain the hiding place of the fugitives, and
he had good reason to believe that they had not gone
far but were lurking in some retreat which had been
already prepared. It was certain from the first,
however, that they would eventually be detected, as
the cook, from the evidence of one or two tradespeople
who have caught a glimpse of him through the window,
was a man of most remarkable appearance being
a huge and hideous mulatto, with yellowish features
of a pronounced negroid type. This man has been
seen since the crime, for he was detected and pursued
by Constable Walters on the same evening, when he
had the audacity to revisit Wisteria Lodge.
Inspector Baynes, considering that such a visit must
have some purpose in view and was likely, therefore,
to be repeated, abandoned the house but left an ambuscade
in the shrubbery. The man walked into the trap
and was captured last night after a struggle in which
Constable Downing was badly bitten by the savage.
We understand that when the prison is brought before
the magistrates a remand will be applied for by the
police, and that great developments are hoped from
his capture.”
“Really we must see Baynes at
once,” cried Holmes, picking up his hat.
“We will just catch him before he starts.”
We hurried down the village street and found, as
we had expected, that the inspector was just leaving
his lodgings.
“You’ve seen the paper,
Mr. Holmes?” he asked, holding one out to us.
“Yes, Baynes, I’ve seen
it. Pray don’t think it a liberty if I
give you a word of friendly warning.”
“Of warning, Mr. Holmes?”
“I have looked into this case
with some care, and I am not convinced that you are
on the right lines. I don’t want you to
commit yourself too far unless you are sure.”
“You’re very kind, Mr. Holmes.”
“I assure you I speak for your good.”
It seemed to me that something like
a wink quivered for an instant over one of Mr. Baynes’s
tiny eyes.
“We agreed to work on our own
lines, Mr. Holmes. That’s what I am doing.”
“Oh, very good,” said Holmes. “Don’t
blame me.”
“No, sir; I believe you mean
well by me. But we all have our own systems,
Mr. Holmes. You have yours, and maybe I have
mine.”
“Let us say no more about it.”
“You’re welcome always
to my news. This fellow is a perfect savage,
as strong as a cart-horse and as fierce as the devil.
He chewed Downing’s thumb nearly off before
they could master him. He hardly speaks a word
of English, and we can get nothing out of him but grunts.”
“And you think you have evidence
that he murdered his late master?”
“I didn’t say so, Mr.
Holmes; I didn’t say so. We all have our
little ways. You try yours and I will try mine.
That’s the agreement.”
Holmes shrugged his shoulders as we
walked away together. “I can’t make
the man out. He seems to be riding for a fall.
Well, as he says, we must each try our own way and
see what comes of it. But there’s something
in Inspector Baynes which I can’t quite understand.”
“Just sit down in that chair,
Watson,” said Sherlock Holmes when we had returned
to our apartment at the Bull. “I want to
put you in touch with the situation, as I may need
your help to-night. Let me show you the evolution
of this case so far as I have been able to follow it.
Simple as it has been in its leading features, it has
none the less presented surprising difficulties in
the way of an arrest. There are gaps in that
direction which we have still to fill.
“We will go back to the note
which was handed in to Garcia upon the evening of
his death. We may put aside this idea of Baynes’s
that Garcia’s servants were concerned in the
matter. The proof of this lies in the fact that
it was he who had arranged for the presence
of Scott Eccles, which could only have been done for
the purpose of an alibi. It was Garcia, then,
who had an enterprise, and apparently a criminal enterprise,
in hand that night in the course of which he met his
death. I say ‘criminal’ because only
a man with a criminal enterprise desires to establish
an alibi. Who, then, is most likely to have taken
his life? Surely the person against whom the
criminal enterprise was directed. So far it
seems to me that we are on safe ground.
“We can now see a reason for
the disappearance of Garcia’s household.
They were all confederates in the same unknown
crime. If it came off when Garcia returned, any
possible suspicion would be warded off by the Englishman’s
evidence, and all would be well. But the attempt
was a dangerous one, and if Garcia did not
return by a certain hour it was probable that his
own life had been sacrificed. It had been arranged,
therefore, that in such a case his two subordinates
were to make for some prearranged spot where they
could escape investigation and be in a position afterwards
to renew their attempt. That would fully explain
the facts, would it not?”
The whole inexplicable tangle seemed
to straighten out before me. I wondered, as I
always did, how it had not been obvious to me before.
“But why should one servant return?”
“We can imagine that in the
confusion of flight something precious, something
which he could not bear to part with, had been left
behind. That would explain his persistence, would
it not?”
“Well, what is the next step?”
“The next step is the note received
by Garcia at the dinner. It indicates a confederate
at the other end. Now, where was the other end?
I have already shown you that it could only lie in
some large house, and that the number of large houses
is limited. My first days in this village were
devoted to a series of walks in which in the intervals
of my botanical researches I made a reconnaissance
of all the large houses and an examination of the
family history of the occupants. One house, and
only one, riveted my attention. It is the famous
old Jacobean grange of High Gable, one mile on the
farther side of Oxshott, and less than half a mile
from the scene of the tragedy. The other mansions
belonged to prosaic and respectable people who live
far aloof from romance. But Mr. Henderson, of
High Gable, was by all accounts a curious man to whom
curious adventures might befall. I concentrated
my attention, therefore, upon him and his household.
“A singular set of people, Watson the
man himself the most singular of them all. I
managed to see him on a plausible pretext, but I seemed
to read in his dark, deepset, brooding eyes that he
was perfectly aware of my true business. He
is a man of fifty, strong, active, with iron-gray
hair, great bunched black eyebrows, the step of a deer
and the air of an emperor a fierce, masterful
man, with a red-hot spirit behind his parchment face.
He is either a foreigner or has lived long in the
tropics, for he is yellow and sapless, but tough as
whipcord. His friend and secretary, Mr. Lucas,
is undoubtedly a foreigner, chocolate brown, wily,
suave, and catlike, with a poisonous gentleness of
speech. You see, Watson, we have come already
upon two sets of foreigners one at Wisteria
Lodge and one at High Gable so our gaps
are beginning to close.
“These two men, close and confidential
friends, are the centre of the household; but there
is one other person who for our immediate purpose
may be even more important. Henderson has two
children girls of eleven and thirteen.
Their governess is a Miss Burnet, an Englishwoman
of forty or thereabouts. There is also one confidential
manservant. This little group forms the real
family, for their travel about together, and Henderson
is a great traveller, always on the move. It
is only within the last weeks that he has returned,
after a year’s absence, to High Gable.
I may add that he is enormously rich, and whatever
his whims may be he can very easily satisfy them.
For the rest, his house is full of butlers, footmen,
maidservants, and the usual overfed, underworked staff
of a large English country house.
“So much I learned partly from
village gossip and partly from my own observation.
There are no better instruments than discharged servants
with a grievance, and I was lucky enough to find one.
I call it luck, but it would not have come my way
had I not been looking out for it. As Baynes
remarks, we all have our systems. It was my system
which enabled me to find John Warner, late gardener
of High Gable, sacked in a moment of temper by his
imperious employer. He in turn had friends among
the indoor servants who unite in their fear and dislike
of their master. So I had my key to the secrets
of the establishment.
“Curious people, Watson!
I don’t pretend to understand it all yet, but
very curious people anyway. It’s a double-winged
house, and the servants live on one side, the family
on the other. There’s no link between the
two save for Henderson’s own servant, who serves
the family’s meals. Everything is carried
to a certain door, which forms the one connection.
Governess and children hardly go out at all, except
into the garden. Henderson never by any chance
walks alone. His dark secretary is like his shadow.
The gossip among the servants is that their master
is terribly afraid of something. ’Sold
his soul to the devil in exchange for money,’
says Warner, ’and expects his creditor to come
up and claim his own.’ Where they came
from, or who they are, nobody has an idea. They
are very violent. Twice Henderson has lashed
at folk with his dog-whip, and only his long purse
and heavy compensation have kept him out of the courts.
“Well, now, Watson, let us judge
the situation by this new information. We may
take it that the letter came out of this strange household
and was an invitation to Garcia to carry out some
attempt which had already been planned. Who wrote
the note? It was someone within the citadel,
and it was a woman. Who then but Miss Burnet,
the governess? All our reasoning seems to point
that way. At any rate, we may take it as a hypothesis
and see what consequences it would entail. I
may add that Miss Burnet’s age and character
make it certain that my first idea that there might
be a love interest in our story is out of the question.
“If she wrote the note she was
presumably the friend and confederate of Garcia.
What, then, might she be expected to do if she heard
of his death? If he met it in some nefarious
enterprise her lips might be sealed. Still,
in her heart, she must retain bitterness and hatred
against those who had killed him and would presumably
help so far as she could to have revenge upon them.
Could we see her, then and try to use her?
That was my first thought. But now we come to
a sinister fact. Miss Burnet has not been seen
by any human eye since the night of the murder.
From that evening she has utterly vanished.
Is she alive? Has she perhaps met her end on
the same night as the friend whom she had summoned?
Or is she merely a prisoner? There is the point
which we still have to decide.
“You will appreciate the difficulty
of the situation, Watson. There is nothing upon
which we can apply for a warrant. Our whole scheme
might seem fantastic if laid before a magistrate.
The woman’s disappearance counts for nothing,
since in that extraordinary household any member of
it might be invisible for a week. And yet she
may at the present moment be in danger of her life.
All I can do is to watch the house and leave my agent,
Warner, on guard at the gates. We can’t
let such a situation continue. If the law can
do nothing we must take the risk ourselves.”
“What do you suggest?”
“I know which is her room.
It is accessible from the top of an outhouse.
My suggestion is that you and I go to-night and see
if we can strike at the very heart of the mystery.”
It was not, I must confess, a very
alluring prospect. The old house with its atmosphere
of murder, the singular and formidable inhabitants,
the unknown dangers of the approach, and the fact that
we were putting ourselves legally in a false position
all combined to damp my ardour. But there was
something in the ice-cold reasoning of Holmes which
made it impossible to shrink from any adventure which
he might recommend. One knew that thus, and only
thus, could a solution be found. I clasped his
hand in silence, and the die was cast.
But it was not destined that our investigation
should have so adventurous an ending. It was
about five o’clock, and the shadows of the March
evening were beginning to fall, when an excited rustic
rushed into our room.
“They’ve gone, Mr. Holmes.
They went by the last train. The lady broke
away, and I’ve got her in a cab downstairs.”
“Excellent, Warner!” cried
Holmes, springing to his feet. “Watson,
the gaps are closing rapidly.”
In the cab was a woman, half-collapsed
from nervous exhaustion. She bore upon her aquiline
and emaciated face the traces of some recent tragedy.
Her head hung listlessly upon her breast, but as she
raised it and turned her dull eyes upon us I saw that
her pupils were dark dots in the centre of the broad
gray iris. She was drugged with opium.
“I watched at the gate, same
as you advised, Mr. Holmes,” said our emissary,
the discharged gardener. “When the carriage
came out I followed it to the station. She was
like one walking in her sleep, but when they tried
to get her into the train she came to life and struggled.
They pushed her into the carriage. She fought
her way out again. I took her part, got her
into a cab, and here we are. I shan’t
forget the face at the carriage window as I led her
away. I’d have a short life if he had his
way the black-eyed, scowling, yellow devil.”
We carried her upstairs, laid her
on the sofa, and a couple of cups of the strongest
coffee soon cleared her brain from the mists of the
drug. Baynes had been summoned by Holmes, and
the situation rapidly explained to him.
“Why, sir, you’ve got
me the very evidence I want,” said the inspector
warmly, shaking my friend by the hand. “I
was on the same scent as you from the first.”
“What! You were after Henderson?”
“Why, Mr. Holmes, when you were
crawling in the shrubbery at High Gable I was up one
of the trees in the plantation and saw you down below.
It was just who would get his evidence first.”
“Then why did you arrest the mulatto?”
Baynes chuckled.
“I was sure Henderson, as he
calls himself, felt that he was suspected, and that
he would lie low and make no move so long as he thought
he was in any danger. I arrested the wrong man
to make him believe that our eyes were off him.
I knew he would be likely to clear off then and give
us a chance of getting at Miss Burnet.”
Holmes laid his hand upon the inspector’s shoulder.
“You will rise high in your
profession. You have instinct and intuition,”
said he.
Baynes flushed with pleasure.
“I’ve had a plain-clothes
man waiting at the station all the week. Wherever
the High Gable folk go he will keep them in sight.
But he must have been hard put to it when Miss Burnet
broke away. However, your man picked her up,
and it all ends well. We can’t arrest without
her evidence, that is clear, so the sooner we get a
statement the better.”
“Every minute she gets stronger,”
said Holmes, glancing at the governess. “But
tell me, Baynes, who is this man Henderson?”
“Henderson,” the inspector
answered, “is Don Murillo, once call the Tiger
of San Pedro.”
The Tiger of San Pedro! The
whole history of the man came back to me in a flash.
He had made his name as the most lewd and bloodthirsty
tyrant that had ever governed any country with a pretence
to civilization. Strong, fearless, and energetic,
he had sufficient virtue to enable him to impose his
odious vices upon a cowering people for ten or twelve
years. His name was a terror through all Central
America. At the end of that time there was a
universal rising against him. But he was as
cunning as he was cruel, and at the first whisper
of coming trouble he had secretly conveyed his treasures
aboard a ship which was manned by devoted adherents.
It was an empty palace which was stormed by the insurgents
next day. The dictator, his two children, his
secretary, and his wealth had all escaped them.
From that moment he had vanished from the world, and
his identity had been a frequent subject for comment
in the European press.
“Yes, sir, Don Murillo, the
Tiger of San Pedro,” said Baynes. “If
you look it up you will find that the San Pedro colours
are green and white, same as in the note, Mr. Holmes.
Henderson he called himself, but I traced him back,
Paris and Rome and Madrid to Barcelona, where his
ship came in in ’86. They’ve been
looking for him all the time for their revenge, but
it is only now that they have begun to find him out.”
“They discovered him a year
ago,” said Miss Burnet, who had sat up and was
now intently following the conversation. “Once
already his life has been attempted, but some evil
spirit shielded him. Now, again, it is the noble,
chivalrous Garcia who has fallen, while the monster
goes safe. But another will come, and yet another,
until some day justice will be done; that is as certain
as the rise of to-morrow’s sun.”
Her thin hands clenched, and her worn face blanched
with the passion of her hatred.
“But how come you into this
matter, Miss Burnet?” asked Holmes. “How
can an English lady join in such a murderous affair?”
“I join in it because there
is no other way in the world by which justice can
be gained. What does the law of England care
for the rivers of blood shed years ago in San Pedro,
or for the shipload of treasure which this man has
stolen? To you they are like crimes committed
in some other planet. But we know.
We have learned the truth in sorrow and in suffering.
To us there is no fiend in hell like Juan Murillo,
and no peace in life while his victims still cry for
vengeance.”
“No doubt,” said Holmes,
“he was as you say. I have heard that he
was atrocious. But how are you affected?”
“I will tell you it all.
This villain’s policy was to murder, on one
pretext or another, every man who showed such promise
that he might in time come to be a dangerous rival.
My husband yes, my real name is Signora
Victor Durando was the San Pedro minister
in London. He met me and married me there.
A nobler man never lived upon earth. Unhappily,
Murillo heard of his excellence, recalled him on some
pretext, and had him shot. With a premonition
of his fate he had refused to take me with him.
His estates were confiscated, and I was left with
a pittance and a broken heart.
“Then came the downfall of the
tyrant. He escaped as you have just described.
But the many whose lives he had ruined, whose nearest
and dearest had suffered torture and death at his
hands, would not let the matter rest. They banded
themselves into a society which should never be dissolved
until the work was done. It was my part after
we had discovered in the transformed Henderson the
fallen despot, to attach myself to his household and
keep the others in touch with his movements.
This I was able to do by securing the position of
governess in his family. He little knew that
the woman who faced him at every meal was the woman
whose husband he had hurried at an hour’s notice
into eternity. I smiled on him, did my duty to
his children, and bided my time. An attempt
was made in Paris and failed. We zig-zagged
swiftly here and there over Europe to throw off the
pursuers and finally returned to this house, which
he had taken upon his first arrival in England.
“But here also the ministers
of justice were waiting. Knowing that he would
return there, Garcia, who is the son of the former
highest dignitary in San Pedro, was waiting with two
trusty companions of humble station, all three fired
with the same reasons for revenge. He could do
little during the day, for Murillo took every precaution
and never went out save with his satellite Lucas,
or Lopez as he was known in the days of his greatness.
At night, however, he slept alone, and the avenger
might find him. On a certain evening, which had
been prearranged, I sent my friend final instructions,
for the man was forever on the alert and continually
changed his room. I was to see that the doors
were open and the signal of a green or white light
in a window which faced the drive was to give notice
if all was safe or if the attempt had better be postponed.
“But everything went wrong with
us. In some way I had excited the suspicion
of Lopez, the secretary. He crept up behind me
and sprang upon me just as I had finished the note.
He and his master dragged me to my room and held
judgment upon me as a convicted traitress. Then
and there they would have plunged their knives into
me could they have seen how to escape the consequences
of the deed. Finally, after much debate, they
concluded that my murder was too dangerous. But
they determined to get rid forever of Garcia.
They had gagged me, and Murillo twisted my arm round
until I gave him the address. I swear that he
might have twisted it off had I understood what it
would mean to Garcia. Lopez addressed the note
which I had written, sealed it with his sleeve-link,
and sent it by the hand of the servant, Jose.
How they murdered him I do not know, save that it was
Murillo’s hand who struck him down, for Lopez
had remained to guard me. I believe he must
have waited among the gorse bushes through which the
path winds and struck him down as he passed.
At first they were of a mind to let him enter the
house and to kill him as a detected burglar; but they
argued that if they were mixed up in an inquiry their
own identity would at once be publicly disclosed and
they would be open to further attacks. With the
death of Garcia, the pursuit might cease, since such
a death might frighten others from the task.
“All would now have been well
for them had it not been for my knowledge of what
they had done. I have no doubt that there were
times when my life hung in the balance. I was
confined to my room, terrorized by the most horrible
threats, cruelly ill-used to break my spirit see
this stab on my shoulder and the bruises from end
to end of my arms and a gag was thrust
into my mouth on the one occasion when I tried to call
from the window. For five days this cruel imprisonment
continued, with hardly enough food to hold body and
soul together. This afternoon a good lunch was
brought me, but the moment after I took it I knew that
I had been drugged. In a sort of dream I remember
being half-led, half-carried to the carriage; in the
same state I was conveyed to the train. Only
then, when the wheels were almost moving, did I suddenly
realize that my liberty lay in my own hands.
I sprang out, they tried to drag me back, and had
it not been for the help of this good man, who led
me to the cab, I should never had broken away.
Now, thank God, I am beyond their power forever.”
We had all listened intently to this
remarkable statement. It was Holmes who broke
the silence.
“Our difficulties are not over,”
he remarked, shaking his head. “Our police
work ends, but our legal work begins.”
“Exactly,” said I.
“A plausible lawyer could make it out as an
act of self-defence. There may be a hundred
crimes in the background, but it is only on this one
that they can be tried.”
“Come, come,” said Baynes
cheerily, “I think better of the law than that.
Self-defence is one thing. To entice a man in
cold blood with the object of murdering him is another,
whatever danger you may fear from him. No, no,
we shall all be justified when we see the tenants of
High Gable at the next Guildford Assizes.”
It is a matter of history, however,
that a little time was still to elapse before the
Tiger of San Pedro should meet with his deserts.
Wily and bold, he and his companion threw their pursuer
off their track by entering a lodging-house in Edmonton
Street and leaving by the back-gate into Curzon Square.
From that day they were seen no more in England.
Some six months afterwards the Marquess of Montalva
and Signor Rulli, his secretary, were both murdered
in their rooms at the Hotel Escurial at Madrid.
The crime was ascribed to Nihilism, and the murderers
were never arrested. Inspector Baynes visited
us at Baker Street with a printed description of the
dark face of the secretary, and of the masterful features,
the magnetic black eyes, and the tufted brows of his
master. We could not doubt that justice, if belated,
had come at last.
“A chaotic case, my dear Watson,”
said Holmes over an evening pipe. “It will
not be possible for you to present in that compact
form which is dear to your heart. It covers
two continents, concerns two groups of mysterious
persons, and is further complicated by the highly
respectable presence of our friend, Scott Eccles, whose
inclusion shows me that the deceased Garcia had a
scheming mind and a well-developed instinct of self-preservation.
It is remarkable only for the fact that amid a perfect
jungle of possibilities we, with our worthy collaborator,
the inspector, have kept our close hold on the essentials
and so been guided along the crooked and winding path.
Is there any point which is not quite clear to you?”
“The object of the mulatto cook’s return?”
“I think that the strange creature
in the kitchen may account for it. The man was
a primitive savage from the backwoods of San Pedro,
and this was his fetish. When his companion
and he had fled to some prearranged retreat already
occupied, no doubt by a confederate the
companion had persuaded him to leave so compromising
an article of furniture. But the mulatto’s
heart was with it, and he was driven back to it next
day, when, on reconnoitering through the window, he
found policeman Walters in possession. He waited
three days longer, and then his piety or his superstition
drove him to try once more. Inspector Baynes,
who, with his usual astuteness, had minimized the incident
before me, had really recognized its importance and
had left a trap into which the creature walked.
Any other point, Watson?”
“The torn bird, the pail of
blood, the charred bones, all the mystery of that
weird kitchen?”
Holmes smiled as he turned up an entry in his note-book.
“I spent a morning in the British
Museum reading up on that and other points.
Here is a quotation from Eckermann’s Voodooism
and the Negroid Religions:
“’The true voodoo-worshipper
attempts nothing of importance without certain sacrifices
which are intended to propitiate his unclean gods.
In extreme cases these rites take the form of human
sacrifices followed by cannibalism. The more
usual victims are a white cock, which is plucked in
pieces alive, or a black goat, whose throat is cut
and body burned.’
“So you see our savage friend
was very orthodox in his ritual. It is grotesque,
Watson,” Holmes added, as he slowly fastened
his notebook, “but, as I have had occasion to
remark, there is but one step from the grotesque to
the horrible.”