“Thefactsarebrieflythese:Somefiveyearsago,duringa
lengthyvisittoWarsaw,Imadetheacquaintanceofthewell-known
adventuress,IreneAdler。Thenameisnodoubtfamiliartoyou。”
“Kindlylookherupinmyindex,Doctor,“murmuredHolmeswithout
openinghiseyes。Formanyyearshehadadoptedasystemof
docketingallparagraphsconcerningmenandthings,sothatitwas
difficulttonameasubjectorapersononwhichhecouldnotat
oncefurnishinformation。InthiscaseIfoundherbiography
sandwichedinbetweenthatofaHebrewrabbiandthatofa
staff-commanderwhohadwrittenamonographuponthedeep-seafishes。
“Letmesee!“saidHolmes。“Hum!BorninNewJerseyintheyear
1858。Contralto-hum!LaScala,hum!PrimadonnaImperialOperaof
Warsaw-yes!Retiredfromoperaticstage-ha!LivinginLondon-
quiteso!YourMajesty,asIunderstand,becameentangledwiththis
youngperson,wrotehersomecompromisingletters,andisnowdesirous
ofgettingthoselettersback。”
“Preciselyso。Buthow-“
“Wasthereasecretmarriage?“
“None。”
“Nolegalpapersorcertificates?“
“None。”
“ThenIfailtofollowyourMajesty。Ifthisyoungpersonshould
produceherlettersforblackmailingorotherpurposes,howisshe
toprovetheirauthenticity?“
“Thereisthewriting。”
“Pooh,pooh!Forgery。”
“Myprivatenote-paper。”
“Stolen。”
“Myownseal。”
“Imitated。”
“Myphotograph。”
“Bought。”
“Wewerebothinthephotograph。”
“Ohdear!Thatisverybad!YourMajestyhasindeedcommittedan
indiscretion。”
“Iwasmad-insane。”
“Youhavecompromisedyourselfseriously。”
“IwasonlyCrownPrincethen。Iwasyoung。Iambutthirtynow。”
“Itmustberecovered。”
“Wehavetriedandfailed。”
“YourMajestymustpay。Itmustbebought。”
“Shewillnotsell。”
“Stolen,then。”
“Fiveattemptshavebeenmade。Twiceburglarsinmypayransacked
herhouse。Oncewedivertedherluggagewhenshetravelled。Twice
shehasbeenwaylaid。Therehasbeennoresult。”
“Nosignofit?“
“Absolutelynone。”
Holmeslaughed。“Itisquiteaprettylittleproblem,“saidhe。
“Butaveryseriousonetome,“returnedtheKingreproachfully。
“Very,indeed。Andwhatdoessheproposetodowiththephotograph?“
“Toruinme。”
“Buthow?“
“Iamabouttobemarried。”
“SoIhaveheard。”
“ToClotildeLothmanvonSaxe-Meningen,seconddaughterofthe
KingofScandinavia。Youmayknowthestrictprinciplesofherfamily。
Sheisherselftheverysoulofdelicacy。Ashadowofadoubtastomy
conductwouldbringthemattertoanend。”
“AndIreneAdler?“
“Threatenstosendthemthephotograph。Andshewilldoit。Iknow
thatshewilldoit。Youdonotknowher,butshehasasoulofsteel。
Shehasthefaceofthemostbeautifulofwomen,andthemindofthe
mostresoluteofmen。RatherthanIshouldmarryanotherwoman,
therearenolengthstowhichshewouldnotgo-none。”
“Youaresurethatshehasnotsentityet?“
“Iamsure。”
“Andwhy?“
“Becauseshehassaidthatshewouldsenditonthedaywhenthe
betrothalwaspubliclyproclaimed。ThatwillbenextMonday。”
“Oh,thenwehavethreedaysyet,“saidHolmeswithayawn。“Thatis
veryfortunate,asIhaveoneortwomattersofimportancetolook
intojustatpresent。YourMajestywill,ofcourse,stayinLondonfor
thepresent?“
“Certainly。YouwillfindmeattheLanghamunderthenameofthe
CountVonKramm。”
“ThenIshalldropyoualinetoletyouknowhowweprogress。”
“Praydoso。Ishallbeallanxiety。”
“Then,astomoney?“
“Youhavecarteblanche。”
“Absolutely?“
“ItellyouthatIwouldgiveoneoftheprovincesofmykingdom
tohavethatphotograph。”
“Andforpresentexpenses?“
TheKingtookaheavychamoisleatherbagfromunderhiscloakand
laiditonthetable。
“Therearethreehundredpoundsingoldandsevenhundredinnotes,“
hesaid。
Holmesscribbledareceiptuponasheetofhisnote-bookand
handedittohim。
“AndMademoiselle”saddress?“heasked。
“IsBrionyLodge,SerpentineAvenue,St。John”sWood。”
Holmestookanoteofit。“Oneotherquestion,“saidhe。“Wasthe
photographacabinet?“
“Itwas。”
“Then,good-night,yourMajesty,andItrustthatweshallsoonhave
somegoodnewsforyou。Andgood-night,Watson,“headded,asthe
wheelsoftheroyalbroughamrolleddownthestreet。“Ifyouwillbe
goodenoughtocallto-morrowafternoonatthreeo”clockIshouldlike
tochatthislittlematteroverwithyou。”
2
Atthreeo”clockpreciselyIwasatBakerStreet,butHolmeshadnot
yetreturned。Thelandladyinformedmethathehadleftthehouse
shortlyaftereighto”clockinthemorning。Isatdownbesidethe
fire,however,withtheintentionofawaitinghim,howeverlonghe
mightbe。Iwasalreadydeeplyinterestedinhisinquiry,for,
thoughitwassurroundedbynoneofthegrimandstrangefeatures
whichwereassociatedwiththetwocrimeswhichIhavealready
recorded,still,thenatureofthecaseandtheexaltedstationofhis
clientgaveitacharacterofitsown。Indeed,apartfromthenature
oftheinvestigationwhichmyfriendhadonhand,therewas
somethinginhismasterlygraspofasituation,andhiskeen,incisive
reasoning,whichmadeitapleasuretometostudyhissystemofwork,
andtofollowthequick,subtlemethodsbywhichhedisentangledthe
mostinextricablemysteries。SoaccustomedwasItohisinvariable
successthattheverypossibilityofhisfailinghadceasedtoenter
intomyhead。
Itwascloseuponfourbeforethedooropened,andadrunken-looking
groom,ill-kemptandside-whiskered,withaninflamedfaceand
disreputableclothes,walkedintotheroom。AccustomedasIwasto
myfriend”samazingpowersintheuseofdisguises,Ihadtolook
threetimesbeforeIwascertainthatitwasindeedhe。Withanod
hevanishedintothebedroom,whenceheemergedinfiveminutes
tweed-suitedandrespectable,asofold。Puttinghishandsintohis
pockets,hestretchedouthislegsinfrontofthefireandlaughed
heartilyforsomeminutes。
“Well,really!“hecried,andthenhechokedandlaughedagainuntil
hewasobligedtolieback,limpandhelpless,inthechair。
“Whatisit?“
“It”squitetoofunny。IamsureyoucouldneverguesshowI
employedmymorning,orwhatIendedbydoing。”
“Ican”timagine。Isupposethatyouhavebeenwatchingthe
habits,andperhapsthehouse,ofMissIreneAdler。”
“Quiteso;butthesequelwasratherunusual。Iwilltellyou,
however。Ileftthehousealittleaftereighto”clockthismorningin
thecharacterofagroomoutofwork。Thereisawonderfulsympathy
andfreemasonryamonghorsymen。Beoneofthem,andyouwillknowall
thatthereistoknow。IsoonfoundBrionyLodge。Itisabijouvilla,
withagardenattheback,butbuiltoutinfrontrightuptothe
road,twostories。Chubblocktothedoor。Largesitting-roomonthe
rightside,wellfurnished,withlongwindowsalmosttothefloor,and
thosepreposterousEnglishwindowfastenerswhichachildcould
open。Behindtherewasnothingremarkable,savethatthepassage
windowcouldbereachedfromthetopofthecoach-house。Iwalked
rounditandexamineditcloselyfromeverypointofview,butwithout
notinganythingelseofinterest。
“Ithenloungeddownthestreetandfound,asIexpected,thatthere
wasamewsinalanewhichrunsdownbyonewallofthegarden。Ilent
theostlersahandinrubbingdowntheirhorses,andreceivedin
exchangetwopence,aglassofhalfandhalf,twofillsofshag
tobacco,andasmuchinformationasIcoulddesireaboutMissAdler,
tosaynothingofhalfadozenotherpeopleintheneighbourhoodin
whomIwasnotintheleastinterested,butwhosebiographiesIwas
compelledtolistento。”
“AndwhatofIreneAdler?“Iasked。
“Oh,shehasturnedallthemen”sheadsdowninthatpart。Sheis
thedaintiestthingunderabonnetonthisplanet。Sosaythe
Serpentine-mews,toaman。Shelivesquietly,singsatconcerts,
drivesoutatfiveeveryday,andreturnsatsevensharpfordinner。
Seldomgoesoutatothertimes,exceptwhenshesings。Hasonlyone
malevisitor,butagooddealofhim。Heisdark,handsome,and
dashing,nevercallslessthanonceaday,andoftentwice。Heisa
Mr。GodfreyNorton,oftheInnerTemple。Seetheadvantagesofa
cabmanasaconfidant。theyhaddrivenhimhomeadozentimesfrom
Serpentine-mews,andknewallabouthim。WhenIhadlistenedtoall
theyhadtotell,IbegantowalkupanddownnearBrionyLodgeonce
more,andtothinkovermyplanofcampaign。
“ThisGodfreyNortonwasevidentlyanimportantfactorinthe
matter。Hewasalawyer。Thatsoundedominous。Whatwastherelation
betweenthem,andwhattheobjectofhisrepeatedvisits?Wasshe
hisclient,hisfriend,orhismistress?Iftheformer,shehad
probablytransferredthephotographtohiskeeping。Ifthelatter,
itwaslesslikely。OntheissueofthisquestiondependedwhetherI
shouldcontinuemyworkatBrionyLodge,orturnmyattentiontothe
gentleman”schambersintheTemple。Itwasadelicatepointandit
widenedthefieldofmyinquiry。IfearthatIboreyouwiththese
details,butIhavetoletyouseemylittledifficulties,ifyou
aretounderstandthesituation。”
“Iamfollowingyouclosely,“Ianswered。
“Iwasstillbalancingthematterinmymindwhenahansomcabdrove
uptoBrionyLodge,andagentlemansprangout。Hewasaremarkably
handsomeman,dark,aquiline,andmoustached-evidentlythemanof
whomIhadheard。Heappearedtobeinagreathurry,shoutedtothe
cabmantowait,andbrushedpastthemaidwhoopenedthedoorwiththe
airofamanwhowasthoroughlyathome。
“Hewasinthehouseabouthalfanhour,andIcouldcatch
glimpsesofhiminthewindowsofthesitting-room,pacingupand
down,talkingexcitedly,andwavinghisarms。OfherIcouldsee
nothing。Presentlyheemerged,lookingevenmoreflurriedthanbefore。
Ashesteppeduptothecab,hepulledagoldwatchfromhispocket
andlookedatitearnestly,`Drivelikethedevil”heshouted,`first
toGross&Hankey”sinRegentStreet,andthentotheChurchofSt。
MonicaintheEdgewareRoad。Halfaguineaifyoudoitintwenty
minutes!”
“Awaytheywent,andIwasjustwonderingwhetherIshouldnotdo
welltofollowthemwhenupthelanecameaneatlittlelandau,the
coachmanwithhiscoatonlyhalf-buttoned,andhistieunderhis
ear,whileallthetagsofhisharnesswerestickingoutofthe
buckles。Ithadn”tpulledupbeforesheshotoutofthehalldoor
andintoit。Ionlycaughtaglimpseofheratthemoment,butshewas
alovelywoman,withafacethatamanmightdiefor。
“`TheChurchofSt。Monica,John”shecried,`andhalfa
sovereignifyoureachitintwentyminutes。”
“Thiswasquitetoogoodtolose,Watson。Iwasjustbalancing
whetherIshouldrunforit,orwhetherIshouldperchbehindher
landauwhenacabcamethroughthestreet。Thedriverlookedtwice
atsuchashabbyfare,butIjumpedinbeforehecouldobject。`The
ChurchofSt。Monica”saidI,`andhalfasovereignifyoureachit
intwentyminutes。”Itwastwenty-fiveminutestotwelve,andof
courseitwasclearenoughwhatwasinthewind。
“Mycabbydrovefast。Idon”tthinkIeverdrovefaster,butthe
othersweretherebeforeus。Thecabandthelandauwiththeir
steaminghorseswereinfrontofthedoorwhenIarrived。Ipaidthe
manandhurriedintothechurch。Therewasnotasoultheresavethe
twowhomIhadfollowedandasurplicedclergyman,whoseemedtobe
expostalatingwiththem。Theywereallthreestandinginaknotin
frontofthealtar。Iloungedupthesideaislelikeanyotheridler
whohasdroppedintoachurch。Suddenly,tomysurprise,thethree
atthealtarfacedroundtome,andGodfreyNortoncamerunningas
hardashecouldtowardsme。
“`ThankGod”hecried。`You”lldo。Come!Come!”
“`Whatthen?”Iasked。
“`Come,man,come,onlythreeminutes,oritwon”tbelegal。”
“Iwashalf-draggeduptothealtar,andbeforeIknewwhereIwasI
foundmyselfmumblingresponseswhichwerewhisperedinmyear,and
vouchingforthingsofwhichIknewnothing,andgenerallyassisting
inthesecuretyingupofIreneAdler,spinster,toGodfreyNorton,
bachelor。Itwasalldoneinaninstant,andtherewasthegentleman
thankingmeontheonesideandtheladyontheother,whilethe
clergymanbeamedonmeinfront。Itwasthemostpreposterousposition
inwhichIeverfoundmyselfinmylife,anditwasthethoughtof
itthatstartedmelaughingjustnow。Itseemsthattherehadbeen
someinformalityabouttheirlicense,thattheclergymanabsolutely
refusedtomarrythemwithoutawitnessofsomesort,andthatmy
luckyappearancesavedthebridegroomfromhavingtosallyoutinto
thestreetsinsearchofabestman。Thebridegavemeasovereign,
andImeantowearitonmywatch-chaininmemoryoftheoccasion。”
“Thisisaveryunexpectedturnofaffairs,“saidI;“andwhat
then?“
“Well,Ifoundmyplansveryseriouslymenaced。Itlookedasif
thepairmighttakeanimmediatedeparture,andsonecessitatevery
promptandenergeticmeasuresonmypart。Atthechurchdoor,however,
theyseparated,hedrivingbacktotheTemple,andshetoherown
house。`Ishalldriveoutintheparkatfiveasusual”shesaidas
shelefthim。Iheardnomore。Theydroveawayindifferent
directions,andIwentofftomakemyownarrangements。”
“Whichare?“
“Somecoldbeefandaglassofbeer,“heanswered,ringingthebell。
“Ihavebeentoobusytothinkoffood,andIamlikelytobebusier
stillthisevening。Bytheway,Doctor,Ishallwantyour
cooperation。”
“Ishallbedelighted。”
“Youdon”tmindbreakingthelaw?“
“Notintheleast。”
“Norrunningachanceofarrest?“
“Notinagoodcause。”
“Oh,thecauseisexcellent!“
“ThenIamyourman。”
“IwassurethatImightrelyonyou。”
“Butwhatisityouwish?“
“WhenMrs。TurnerhasbroughtinthetrayIwillmakeitclearto
you。Now,“hesaidasheturnedhungrilyonthesimplefarethatour
landladyhadprovided,“ImustdiscussitwhileIeat,forIhave
notmuchtime。Itisnearlyfivenow。Intwohourswemustbeonthe
sceneofaction。MissIrene,orMadame,rather,returnsfromherdrive
atseven。WemustbeatBrionyLodgetomeether。”
“Andwhatthen?“
“Youmustleavethattome。Ihavealreadyarrangedwhatisto
occur。ThereisonlyonepointonwhichImustinsist。Youmustnot
interfere,comewhatmay。Youunderstand?“
“Iamtobeneutral?“
“Todonothingwhatever。Therewillprobablybesomesmall
unpleasantness。Donotjoininit。Itwillendinmybeingconveyed
intothehouse。Fourorfiveminutesafterwardsthesitting-room
windowwillopen。Youaretostationyourselfclosetothatopen
window。”
“Yes。”
“Youaretowatchme,forIwillbevisibletoyou。”
“Yes。”
“AndwhenIraisemyhand-so-youwillthrowintotheroomwhatI
giveyoutothrow,andwill,atthesametime,raisethecryof
fire。Youquitefollowme?“
“Entirely。”
“Itisnothingveryformidable,“hesaid,takingalongcigar-shaped
rollfromhispocket。“Itisanordinaryplumber”ssmoke-rocket,
fittedwithacapateitherendtomakeitself-lighting。Yourtaskis
confinedtothat。Whenyouraiseyourcryoffire,itwillbetakenup
byquiteanumberofpeople。Youmaythenwalktotheendofthe
street,andIwillrejoinyouintenminutes。IhopethatIhave
mademyselfclear?“
“Iamtoremainneutral,togetnearthewindow,towatchyou,and
atthesignaltothrowinthisobject,thentoraisethecryof
fire,andtowaityouatthecornerofthestreet。”
“Precisely。”
“Thenyoumayentirelyrelyonme。”
“Thatisexcellent。Ithink,perhaps,itisalmosttimethatI
prepareforthenewroleIhavetoplay。”
Hedisappearedintohisbedroomandreturnedinafewminutesinthe
characterofanamiableandsimple-mindedNonconformistclergyman。His
broadblackhat,hisbaggytrousers,hiswhitetiehissympathetic
smile,andgenerallookofpeeringandbenevolentcuriositywere
suchasMr。JohnHarealonecouldhaveequalled。Itwasnotmerely
thatHolmeschangedhiscostume。Hisexpression,hismanner,his
verysoulseemedtovarywitheveryfreshpartthatheassumed。The
stagelostafineactor,evenassciencelostanacutereasoner,
whenhebecameaspecialistincrime。
ItwasaquarterpastsixwhenweleftBakerStreet,anditstill
wantedtenminutestothehourwhenwefoundourselvesinSerpentine
Avenue。Itwasalreadydusk,andthelampswerejustbeinglighted
aswepacedupanddowninfrontofBrionyLodge,waitingforthe
comingofitsoccupant。ThehousewasjustsuchasIhadpicturedit
fromSherlockHolmes”ssuccinctdescription,butthelocalityappeared
tobelessprivatethanIexpected。Onthecontrary,forasmall
streetinaquietneighbourhood,itwasremarkablyanimated。Therewas
agroupofshabbilydressedmensmokingandlaughinginacorner,a
scissors-grinderwithhiswheel,twoguardsmenwhowereflirting
withanurse-girl,andseveralwelldressedyoungmenwhowere
loungingupanddownwithcigarsintheirmouths。
“Yousee,“remarkedHolmes,aswepacedtoandfroinfrontofthe
house,“thismarriagerathersimplifiesmatters。Thephotograph
becomesadouble-edgedweaponnow。Thechancesarethatshewouldbe
asaversetoitsbeingseenbyMr。GodfreyNorton,asourclientisto
itscomingtotheeyesofhisprincess。Nowthequestionis,Whereare
wetofindthephotograph?“
“Where,indeed?“
“Itismostunlikelythatshecarriesitaboutwithher。Itis
cabinetsize。Toolargeforeasyconcealmentaboutawoman”sdress。
SheknowsthattheKingiscapableofhavingherwaylaidandsearched。
Twoattemptsofthesorthavealreadybeenmade。Wemaytakeit,then,
thatshedoesnotcarryitaboutwithher。”
“Where,then?”
“Herbankerorherlawyer。Thereisthatdoublepossibility。ButI
aminclinedtothinkneither。Womenarenaturallysecretive,and
theyliketodotheirownsecreting。Whyshouldshehanditoverto
anyoneelse?Shecouldtrustherownguardianship,butshecouldnot
tellwhatindirectorpoliticalinfluencemightbebroughttobear
uponabusinessman。Besides,rememberthatshehadresolvedtouseit
withinafewdays。Itmustbewhereshecanlayherhandsuponit。
Itmustbeinherownhouse。”
“Butithastwicebeenburgled。”
“Pshaw!Theydidnotknowhowtolook。”
“Buthowwillyoulook?“
“Iwillnotlook。”
“Whatthen?“
“Iwillgethertoshowme。”
“Butshewillrefuse。”
“Shewillnotbeableto。ButIheartherumbleofwheels。Itisher
carriage。Nowcarryoutmyorderstotheletter。”
Ashespokethegleamoftheside-lightsofacarriagecameround
thecurveoftheavenue。Itwasasmartlittlelandauwhichrattledup
tothedoorofBrionyLodge。Asitpulledup,oneoftheloafingmen
atthecornerdashedforwardtoopenthedoorinthehopeofearninga
copper,butwaselbowedawaybyanotherloafer,whohadrushedupwith
thesameintention。Afiercequarrelbrokeout,whichwasincreasedby
thetwoguardsmen,whotooksideswithoneoftheloungers,andbythe
scissors-grinder,whowasequallyhotupontheotherside。Ablow
wasstruck,andinaninstantthelady,whohadsteppedfromher
carriage,wasthecentreofalittleknotofflushedandstruggling
men,whostrucksavagelyateachotherwiththeirfistsandsticks。
Holmesdashedintothecrowdtoprotectthelady;butjustashe
reachedherhegaveacryanddroppedtotheground,withtheblood
runningfreelydownhisface。Athisfalltheguardsmentookto
theirheelsinonedirectionandtheloungersintheother,whilea
numberofbetterdressedpeople,whohadwatchedthescufflewithout
takingpartinit,crowdedintohelptheladyandtoattendtothe
injuredman。IreneAdler,asIwillstillcallher,hadhurriedupthe
steps;butshestoodatthetopwithhersuperbfigureoutlined
againstthelightsofthehall,lookingbackintothestreet。
“Isthepoorgentlemanmuchhurt?“sheasked。
“Heisdead,“criedseveralvoices。
“No,no,there”slifeinhim!“shoutedanother。“Buthe”llbegone
beforeyoucangethimtohospital。”
“He”sabravefellow,“saidawoman。“Theywouldhavehadthelady”s
purseandwatchifithadn”tbeenforhim。Theywereagang,anda
roughone,too。Ah,he”sbreathingnow。”
“Hecan”tlieinthestreet。Maywebringhimin,marm?“
“Surely。Bringhimintothesitting-room。Thereisacomfortable
sofa。Thisway,please!“
SlowlyandsolemnlyhewashomeintoBrionyLodgeandlaidoutin
theprincipalroom,whileIstillobservedtheproceedingsfrommy
postbythewindow。Thelampshadbeenlit,buttheblindshadnot
beendrawn,sothatIcouldseeHolmesashelayuponthecouch。I
donotknowwhetherhewasseizedwithcompunctionatthatmoment
fortheparthewasplaying,butIknowthatIneverfeltmore
heartilyashamedofmyselfinmylifethanwhenIsawthebeautiful
creatureagainstwhomIwasconspiring,orthegraceandkindliness
withwhichshewaitedupontheinjuredman。Andyetitwouldbethe
blackesttreacherytoHolmestodrawbacknowfromthepartwhichhe
hadintrustedtome。Ihardenedmyheart,andtookthesmoke-rocket
fromundermyulster。Afterall,Ithoughtwearenotinjuringher。We
arebutpreventingherfrominjuringanother。
Holmeshadsatupuponthecouch,andIsawhimmotionlikeaman
whoisinneedofair。Amaidrushedacrossandthrewopenthewindow。
AtthesameinstantIsawhimraisehishand,andatthesignalI
tossedmyrocketintotheroomwithacryof`Fire!”Thewordwasno
sooneroutofmymouththanthewholecrowdofspectators,well
dressedandill-gentlemen,ostlers,andservant-maids-joinedina
generalshriekof`Fire!”Thickcloudsofsmokecurledthroughthe
roomandoutattheopenwindow。Icaughtaglimpseofrushing
figures,andamomentlaterthevoiceofHolmesfromwithinassuring
themthatitwasafalsealarm。Slippingthroughtheshoutingcrowd
Imademywaytothecornerofthestreet,andintenminuteswas
rejoicedtofindmyfriend”sarminmine,andtogetawayfromthe
sceneofuproar。Hewalkedswiftlyandinsilenceforsomefewminutes
untilwehadturneddownoneofthequietstreetswhichleadtowards
theEdgewareRoad。
“Youdiditverynicely,Doctor,“heremarked。“Nothingcouldhave
beenbetter。Itisallright。”
“Youhavethephotograph?“
“Iknowwhereitis。”
“Andhowdidyoufindout?“
“Sheshowedme,asItoldyoushewould。”
“Iamstillinthedark。”
“Idonotwishtomakeamystery,“saidhe,laughing。Thematterwas
perfectlysimple。You,ofcourse,sawthateveryoneinthestreet
wasanaccomplice。Theywereallengagedfortheevening。”
“Iguessedasmuch。”
Then,whentherowbrokeout,Ihadalittlemoistredpaintin
thepalmofmyhand。Irushedforward,felldown,clappedmyhandto
myface,andbecameapiteousspectacle。Itisanoldtrick。”
“ThatalsoIcouldfathom。”
“Thentheycarriedmein。Shewasboundtohavemein。Whatelse
couldshedo?Andintohersitting-room,whichwastheveryroomwhich
Isuspected。Itlaybetweenthatandherbedroom,andIwasdetermined
toseewhich。Theylaidmeonacouch,Imotionedforair,theywere
compelledtoopenthewindow,andyouhadyourchance。”
“Howdidthathelpyou?“
“Itwasall-important。Whenawomanthinksthatherhouseison
fire,herinstinctisatoncetorushtothethingwhichshevalues
most。Itisaperfectlyoverpoweringimpulse,andIhavemorethan
oncetakenadvantageofit。InthecaseoftheDarlingtonsubstitution
scandalitwasofusetome,andalsointheArnsworthCastle
business。Amarriedwomangrabsatherbaby;anunmarriedone
reachesforherjewel-box。Nowitwascleartomethatourladyof
to-dayhadnothinginthehousemoreprecioustoherthanwhatwe
areinquestof。Shewouldrushtosecureit。Thealarmoffirewas
admirablydone。Thesmokeandshoutingwereenoughtoshakenerves
ofsteel。Sherespondedbeautifully。Thephotographisinarecess
behindaslidingpaneljustabovetherightbell-pull。Shewasthere
inaninstant,andIcaughtaglimpseofitasshehalf-drewitout。
WhenIcriedoutthatitwasafalsealarm,shereplacedit,glanced
attherocket,rushedfromtheroom,andIhavenotseenhersince。
Irose,and,makingmyexcuses,escapedfromthehouse。Ihesitated
whethertoattempttosecurethephotographatonce;butthe
coachmanhadcomein,andashewaswatchingmenarrowlyitseemed
safertowait。Alittleover-precipitancemayruinall。”
“Andnow?“Iasked。
“Ourquestispracticallyfinished。IshallcallwiththeKing
to-morrow,andwithyou,ifyoucaretocomewithus。Wewillshown
intothesitting-roomtowaitforthelady,butitisprobablethat
whenshecomesshemayfindneitherusnorthephotograph。Itmightbe
asatisfactiontohisMajestytoregainitwithhisownhands。”
“Andwhenwillyoucall?“
“Ateightinthemorning。Shewillnotbeup,sothatweshall
haveaclearfield。Besides,wemustbeprompt,forthismarriage
maymeanacompletechangeinherlifeandhabits。Imustwireto
theKingwithoutdelay。”
WehadreachedBakerStreetandhadstoppedatthedoor。Hewas
searchinghispocketsforthekeywhensomeonepassingsaid:
“Good-night,MisterSherlockHolmes。”
Therewereseveralpeopleonthepavementatthetime,butthe
greetingappearedtocomefromaslimyouthinanulsterwhohad
hurriedby。
“I”veheardthatvoicebefore,“saidHolmes,staringdownthe
dimlylitstreet。
“Now,Iwonderwhothedeucethatcouldhavebeen。”
3
IsleptatBakerStreetthatnight,andwewereengageduponour
toastandcoffeeinthemorningwhentheKingofBohemiarushedinto
theroom。
“Youhavereallygotit!“hecried,graspingSherlockHolmesby
eithershoulderandlookingeagerlyintohisface。
“Notyet。”
“Butyouhavehopes?“
“Ihavehopes。”
“Then,come。Iamallimpatiencetobegone。”
“Wemusthaveacab。”
“No,mybroughamiswaiting。”
“Thenthatwillsimplifymatters。”Wedescendedandstartedoffonce
moreforBrionyLodge。
“IreneAdlerismarried,“remarkedHolmes。
“Married!When?“
“Yesterday。”
“Buttowhom?“
“ToanEnglishlawyernamedNorton。”
“Butshecouldnotlovehim。”
“Iaminhopesthatshedoes。”
“Andwhyinhopes?“
“BecauseitwouldspareyourMajestyallfearoffutureannoyance。
Iftheladylovesherhusband,shedoesnotloveyourMajesty。If
shedoesnotloveyourMajesty,thereisnoreasonwhysheshould
interferewithyourMajesty”splan。”
“Itistrue。Andyet-Well!Iwishshehadbeenofmyownstation!
Whataqueenshewouldhavemade!“Herelapsedintoamoodysilence,
whichwasnotbrokenuntilwedrewupinSerpentineAvenue。
ThedoorofBrionyLodgewasopen,andanelderlywomanstoodupon
thesteps。Shewatcheduswithasardoniceyeaswesteppedfromthe
brougham。
“Mr。SherlockHolmes,Ibelieve?“saidshe。
“IamMr。Holmes,“answeredmycompanion,lookingatherwitha
questioningandratherstartledgaze。
“Indeed!Mymistresstoldmethatyouwerelikelytocall。She
leftthismorningwithherhusbandbythe5:15trainfromCharing
CrossfortheContinent。”
“What!“SherlockHolmesstaggeredback,whitewithchagrinand
surprise。“DoyoumeanthatshehasleftEngland?“
“Nevertoreturn。”
“Andthepapers?“askedtheKinghoarsely。“Allislost。”
“Weshallsee。”Hepushedpasttheservantandrushedintothe
drawing-room,followedbytheKingandmyself。Thefurniturewas
scatteredaboutineverydirection,withdismantledshelvesandopen
drawers,asiftheladyhadhurriedlyransackedthembeforeher
flight。Holmesrushedatthebell-pull,torebackasmallsliding
shutter,and,plunginginhishand,pulledoutaphotographanda
letter。ThephotographwasofIreneAdlerherselfineveningdress,
theletterwassuperscribedto“SherlockHolmes,Esq。Tobeleft
tillcalledfor。”Myfriendtoreitopen,andweallthreereadit
together。Itwasdatedatmidnightoftheprecedingnightandranin
thisway:
MyDearMr。SherlockHolmes:
Youreallydiditverywell。Youtookmeincompletely。Until
afterthealarmoffire,Ihadnotasuspicion。Butthen,whenIfound
howIhadbetrayedmyself,Ibegantothink。Ihadbeenwarnedagainst
youmonthsago。IhadbeentoldthatiftheKingemployedanagent
itwouldcertainlybeyou。Andyouraddresshadbeengivenme。Yet,
withallthis,youmademerevealwhatyouwantedtoknow。Even
afterIbecamesuspicious,Ifoundithardtothinkevilofsucha
dear,kindoldclergyman。But,youknow,Ihavebeentrainedasan
actressmyself。Malecostumeisnothingnewtome。Ioftentake
advantageofthefreedomwhichitgives。IsentJohn,thecoachman,to
watchyou,ranupstairs,gotintomywalking-clothes,asIcanthem,
andcamedownjustasyoudeparted。
Well,Ifollowedyoutoyourdoor,andsomadesurethatIwas
reallyanobjectofinteresttothecelebratedMr。SherlockHolmes。
ThenI,ratherimprudently,wishedyougood-night,andstartedforthe
Templetoseemyhusband。
Weboththoughtthebestresourcewasflight,whenpursuedbyso
formidableanantagonist,soyouwillfindthenestemptywhenyou
callto-morrow。Astothephotograph,yourclientmayrestinpeace。I
loveandamlovedbyabettermanthanhe。TheKingmaydowhathe
willwithouthindrancefromonewhomhehascruellywronged。Ikeepit
onlytosafeguardmyself,andtopreserveaweaponwhichwillalways
securemefromanystepswhichhemighttakeinthefuture。Ileave
aphotographwhichhemightcaretopossess;andIremain,dearMr。
SherlockHolmes,
Verytrulyyours,
IreneNorton,neeAdler。
“Whatawoman-oh,whatawoman!“criedtheKingofBohemia,whenwe
hadallthreereadthisepistle。“DidInottellyouhowquickand
resoluteshewas?Wouldshenothavemadeanadmirablequeen?Isit
notapitythatshewasnotonmylevel?“
“FromwhatIhaveseenoftheladysheseemsindeedtobeona
verydifferentleveltoyourMajesty,“saidHolmescoldly。“Iamsorry
thatIhavenotbeenabletobringyourMajesty”sbusinesstoamore
successfulconclusion。”
“Onthecontrary,mydearsir,“criedtheKing,“nothingcouldbe
moresuccessful。Iknowthatherwordisinviolate。Thephotograph
isnowassafeasifitwereinthefire。”
“IamgladtohearyourMajestysayso。”
“Iamimmenselyindebtedtoyou。PraytellmeinwhatwayIcan
rewardyou。Thisring-“Heslippedanemeraldsnakeringfromhis
fingerandhelditoutuponthepalmofhishand。
“YourMajestyhassomethingwhichIshouldvalueevenmore
highly,“saidHolmes。
“Youhavebuttonameit。”
“Thisphotograph!“
TheKingstaredathiminamazement。
“Irene”sphotograph!“hecried。“Certainly,ifyouwishit。”
“IthankyourMajesty。Thenthereisnomoretobedoneinthe
matter。Ihavethehonourtowishyouaverygood-morning。”He
bowed,and,turningawaywithoutobservingthehandwhichtheKinghad
stretchedouttohim,hesetoffinmycompanyforhischambers。
Andthatwashowagreatscandalthreatenedtoaffectthekingdomof
Bohemia,andhowthebestplansofMr。SherlockHolmeswerebeaten
byawoman”swit。Heusedtomakemerryovertheclevernessof
women,butIhavenotheardhimdoitoflate。Andwhenhespeaksof
IreneAdler,orwhenhereferstoherphotograph,itisalwaysunder
thehonourabletitleofthewoman-
THEEND。
1917
SHERLOCKHOLMES
HISLASTBOW
bySirArthurConanDoyle
AnEpilogueofSherlockHolmes
Itwasnineo”clockatnightuponthesecondofAugust-themost
terribleAugustinthehistoryoftheworld。Onemighthavethought
alreadythatGod”scursehungheavyoveradegenerateworld,forthere
wasanawesomehushandafeelingofvagueexpectationinthesultry
andstagnantair。Thesunhadlongset,butoneblood-redgashlikean
openwoundlaylowinthedistantwest。Above,thestarswere
shiningbrightly,andbelow,thelightsoftheshippingglimmeredin
thebay。ThetwofamousGermansstoodbesidethestoneparapetof
thegardenwalk,withthelong,low,heavilygabledhousebehindthem,
andtheylookeddownuponthebroadsweepofthebeachatthefoot
ofthegreatchalkcliffonwhichVonBork,likesomewanderingeagle,
hadperchedhimselffouryearsbefore。Theystoodwiththeirheads
closetogether,talkinginlow,confidentialtones。Frombelowthetwo
glowingendsoftheircigarsmighthavebeenthesmoulderingeyesof
somemalignantfiendlookingdowninthedarkness。
AremarkablemanthisVonBork-amanwhocouldhardlybematched
amongallthedevotedagentsoftheKaiser。Itwashistalentswhich
hadfirstrecommendedhimfortheEnglishmission,themost
importantmissionofall,butsincehehadtakenitoverthosetalents
hadbecomemoreandmoremanifesttothehalf-dozenpeopleinthe
worldwhowerereallyintouchwiththetruth。Oneofthesewashis
presentcompanion,BaronVonHerling,thechiefsecretaryofthe
legation,whosehuge100-horse-powerBenzcarwasblockingthecountry
laneasitwaitedtowaftitsownerbacktoLondon。
“SofarasIcanjudgethetrendofevents,youwillprobablybe
backinBerlinwithintheweek,“thesecretarywassaying。“Whenyou
getthere,mydearVonBork,Ithinkyouwillbesurprisedatthe
welcomeyouwillreceive。Ihappentoknowwhatisthoughtinthe
highestquartersofyourworkinthiscountry。”Hewasahugeman,the
secretary,deep,broad,andtall,withaslow,heavyfashionofspeech
whichhadbeenhismainassetinhispoliticalcareer。
VonBorklaughed。
“Theyarenotveryhardtodeceive,“heremarked。“Amoredocile,
simplefolkcouldnotbeimagined。”
“Idon”tknowaboutthat,“saidtheotherthoughtfully。“Theyhave
strangelimitsandonemustlearntoobservethem。Itisthat
surfacesimplicityoftheirswhichmakesatrapforthestranger。
One”sfirstimpressionisthattheyareentirelysoft。Thenone
comessuddenlyuponsomethingveryhard,andyouknowthatyouhave
reachedthelimitandmustadaptyourselftothefact。Theyhave,
forexample,theirinsularconventionswhichsimplymustbeobserved。”
“Meaning,”goodform”andthatsortofthing?“VonBorksighedas
onewhohadsufferedmuch。
“MeaningBritishprejudiceinallitsqueermanifestations。Asan
exampleImayquoteoneofmyownworstblunders-Icanaffordtotalk
ofmyblunders,foryouknowmyworkwellenoughtobeawareofmy
successes。Itwasonmyfirstarrival。Iwasinvitedtoaweek-end
gatheringatthecountryhouseofacabinetminister。Theconversation
wasamazinglyindiscreet。”
VonBorknodded。“I”vebeenthere,“saidhedryly。
“Exactly。Well,Inaturallysentaresumeoftheinformationto
Berlin。Unfortunatelyourgoodchancellorisalittleheavy-handed
inthesematters,andhetransmittedaremarkwhichshowedthathewas
awareofwhathadbeensaid。This,ofcourse,tookthetrail
straightuptome。You”venoideatheharmthatitdidme。Therewas
nothingsoftaboutourBritishhostsonthatoccasion,Icanassure
you。Iwastwoyearslivingitdown。Nowyou,withthissporting
poseofyours-“
“No,no,don”tcallitapose。Aposeisanartificialthing。This
isquitenatural。Iamabornsportsman。Ienjoyit。”
“Well,thatmakesitthemoreeffective。Youyachtagainstthem,you
huntwiththem,youplaypolo,youmatchthemineverygame,your
four-in-handtakestheprizeatOlympia。Ihaveevenheardthatyougo
thelengthofboxingwiththeyoungofficers。Whatistheresult?
Nobodytakesyouseriously。Youarea”goodoldsport””quitea
decentfellowforaGerman”ahard-drinking,night-club,
knock-about-town,devil-may-careyoungfellow。Andallthetimethis
quietcountryhouseofyoursisthecentreofhalfthemischiefin
England,andthesportingsquirethemostastutesecret-servicemanin
Europe。Genius,mydearVonBork-genius!“
“Youflatterme,Baron。ButcertainlyImayclaimthatmyfouryears
inthiscountryhavenotbeenunproductive。I”venevershownyoumy
littlestore。Wouldyoumindsteppinginforamoment?“
Thedoorofthestudyopenedstraightontotheterrace。VonBork
pusheditback,and,leadingtheway,heclickedtheswitchofthe
electriclight。Hethenclosedthedoorbehindthebulkyformwhich
followedhimandcarefullyadjustedtheheavycurtainoverthe
latticedwindow。Onlywhenalltheseprecautionshadbeentakenand
testeddidheturnhissunburnedaquilinefacetohisguest。
“Someofmypapershavegone,“saidhe。“Whenmywifeandthe
householdleftyesterdayforFlushingtheytookthelessimportant
withthem。Imust,ofcourse,claimtheprotectionoftheembassy
fortheothers。”
“Yournamehasalreadybeenfiledasoneofthepersonalsuite。
Therewillbenodifficultiesforyouoryourbaggage。Ofcourse,it
isjustpossiblethatwemaynothavetogo。Englandmayleave
Francetoherfate。Wearesurethatthereisnobindingtreaty
betweenthem。”
“AndBelgium?“
“Yes,andBelgium,too。”
VonBorkshookhishead。“Idon”tseehowthatcouldbe。Thereis
adefinitetreatythere。Shecouldneverrecoverfromsucha
humiliation。”
“Shewouldatleasthavepeaceforthemoment。”
“Butherhonour?“
“Tut,mydearsir,weliveinautilitarianage。Honourisa
mediaevalconception。BesidesEnglandisnotready。Itisan
inconceivablething,butevenourspecialwartaxoffiftymillion,
whichonewouldthinkmadeourpurposeasclearasifwehad
advertiseditonthefrontpageoftheTimes,hasnotrousedthese
peoplefromtheirslumbers。Hereandthereonehearsaquestion。Itis
mybusinesstofindananswer。Hereandtherealsothereisan
irritation。Itismybusinesstosootheit。ButIcanassureyou
thatsofarastheessentialsgo-thestorageofmunitions,the
preparationforsubmarineattack,thearrangementsformakinghigh
explosives-nothingisprepared。How,then,canEnglandcomein,
especiallywhenwehavestirredherupsuchadevil”sbrewofIrish
civilwar,window-breakingFuries,andGodknowswhattokeepher
thoughtsathome。”
“Shemustthinkofherfuture。”
“Ah,thatisanothermatter。Ifancythatinthefuturewehave
ourownverydefiniteplansaboutEngland,andthatyourinformation
willbeveryvitaltous。Itisto-dayorto-morrowwithMr。John
Bull。Ifheprefersto-dayweareperfectlyready。Ifitis
to-morrowweshallbemorereadystill。Ishouldthinktheywouldbe
wisertofightwithalliesthanwithoutthem,butthatistheirown
affair。Thisweekistheirweekofdestiny。Butyouwerespeakingof
yourpapers。”Hesatinthearmchairwiththelightshininguponhis
broadbaldhead,whilehepuffedsedatelyathiscigar。
Thelargeoak-panelled,book-linedroomhadacurtainhunginthe
furthercorner。Whenthiswasdrawnitdisclosedalarge,
brass-boundsafe。VonBorkdetachedasmallkeyfromhiswatch
chain,andaftersomeconsiderablemanipulationofthelockheswung
opentheheavydoor。
“Look!“saidhe,standingclear,withawaveofhishand。
Thelightshonevividlyintotheopenedsafe,andthesecretaryof
theembassygazedwithanabsorbedinterestattherowsofstuffed
pigeon-holeswithwhichitwasfurnished。Eachpigeon-holehadits
label,andhiseyesasheglancedalongthemreadalongseriesof
suchtitlesas“Fords,““Harbour-defences,““Aeroplanes,““Ireland,“
“Egypt,““Portsmouthforts,““TheChannel,““Rosythe,“andascore
ofothers。Eachcompartmentwasbristlingwithpapersandplans。
“Colossal!“saidthesecretary。Puttingdownhiscigarhesoftly
clappedhisfathands。
“Andallinfouryears,Baron。Notsuchabadshowforthe
hard-drinking,hard-ridingcountrysquire。Butthegemofmy
collectioniscomingandthereisthesettingallreadyforit。”He
pointedtoaspaceoverwhich“NavalSignals“wasprinted。
“Butyouhaveagooddossiertherealready。”
“Outofdateandwastepaper。TheAdmiraltyinsomewaygotthe
alarmandeverycodehasbeenchanged。Itwasablow,Baron-theworst
setbackinmywholecampaign。Butthankstomycheck-bookandthegood
Altamontallwillbewellto-night。”
TheBaronlookedathiswatchandgaveagutturalexclamationof
disappointment。
“Well,Ireallycanwaitnolonger。Youcanimaginethatthings
aremovingatpresentinCarltonTerraceandthatwehavealltobeat
ourposts。Ihadhopedtobeabletobringnewsofyourgreatcoup。
DidAltamontnamenohour?“
VonBorkpushedoveratelegram。
Willcomewithoutfailto-nightandbringnewsparkingplugs。
ALTAMONT。
“Sparkingplugs,eh?“
“YouseeheposesasamotorexpertandIkeepafullgarage。Inour
codeeverythinglikelytocomeupisnamedaftersomesparepart。If
hetalksofaradiatoritisabattleship,ofanoilpumpacruiser,
andsoon。Sparkingplugsarenavalsignals。”
“FromPortsmouthatmidday,“saidthesecretary,examiningthe
superscription。“Bytheway,whatdoyougivehim?“
“Fivehundredpoundsforthisparticularjob。Ofcoursehehasa
salaryaswell。”
“Thegreedyrogue。Theyareuseful,thesetraitors,butIgrudge
themtheirbloodmoney。”
“IgrudgeAltamontnothing。Heisawonderfulworker。IfIpayhim
well,atleasthedeliversthegoods,tousehisownphrase。Besides
heisnotatraitor。Iassureyouthatourmostpan-GermanicJunkeris
asuckingdoveinhisfeelingstowardsEnglandascomparedwithareal
bitterIrish-American。”
“Oh,anIrish-American?“
“Ifyouheardhimtalkyouwouldnotdoubtit。SometimesIassure
youIcanhardlyunderstandhim。Heseemstohavedeclaredwaron
theKing”sEnglishaswellasontheEnglishking。Mustyoureallygo?
Hemaybehereanymoment。”
“No。I”msorry,butIhavealreadyoverstayedmytime。Weshall
expectyouearlyto-morrow,andwhenyougetthatsignalbook
throughthelittledoorontheDukeofYork”sstepsyoucanputa
triumphantfinistoyourrecordinEngland。What!Tokay!“heindicated
aheavilysealeddust-coveredbottlewhichstoodwithtwohighglasses
uponasalver。
“MayIofferyouaglassbeforeyourjourney?“
“No,thanks。Butitlookslikerevelry。
“Altamonthasanicetasteinwines,andhetookafancytomy
Tokay。Heisatouchyfellowandneedshumouringinsmallthings。I
havetostudyhim,Iassureyou。”Theyhadstrolledoutontothe
terraceagain,andalongittothefurtherendwhereatatouchfrom
theBaron”schauffeurthegreatcarshiveredandchuckled。“Those
arethelightsofHarwich,Isuppose,“saidthesecretary,pulling
onhisdustcoat。“Howstillandpeacefulitallseems。Theremaybe
otherlightswithintheweek,andtheEnglishcoastalesstranquil
place!Theheavens,too,maynotbequitesopeacefulifallthat
thegoodZeppelinpromisesuscomestrue。Bytheway,whoisthat?“
Onlyonewindowshowedalightbehindthem;inittherestooda
lamp,andbesideit,seatedatatable,wasadearoldruddy-faced
womaninacountrycap。Shewasbendingoverherknittingandstopping
occasionallytostrokealargeblackcatuponastoolbesideher。
“ThatisMartha,theonlyservantIhaveleft。”
Thesecretarychuckled。
“ShemightalmostpersonifyBritannia,“saidhe,“withher
completeself-absorptionandgeneralairofcomfortablesomnolence。
Well,aurevoir,VonBork!“Withafinalwaveofhishandhesprang
intothecar,andamomentlaterthetwogoldenconesfromthe
headlightsshotforwardthroughthedarkness。Thesecretarylayback
inthecushionsoftheluxuriouslimousine,withhisthoughtsso
fulloftheimpendingEuropeantragedythathehardlyobservedthatas
hiscarswungroundthevillagestreetitnearlypassedovera
littleFordcomingintheoppositedirection。
VonBorkwalkedslowlybacktothestudywhenthelastgleamsofthe
motorlampshadfadedintothedistance。Ashepassedheobservedthat
hisoldhousekeeperhadputoutherlampandretired。Itwasanew
experiencetohim,thesilenceanddarknessofhiswidespreadhouse
forhisfamilyandhouseholdhadbeenalargeone。Itwasarelief
tohim,however,tothinkthattheywereallinsafetyandthat,but
forthatoneoldwomanwhohadlingeredinthekitchen,hehadthe
wholeplacetohimself。Therewasagooddealoftidyinguptodo
insidehisstudyandhesethimselftodoituntilhiskeen,
handsomefacewasflushedwiththeheatoftheburningpapers。A
leathervalisestoodbesidehistable,andintothishebeganto
packveryneatlyandsystematicallythepreciouscontentsofhissafe。
Hehadhardlygotstartedwiththework,however,whenhisquick
earscaughtthesoundofadistantcar。Instantlyhegavean
exclamationofsatisfaction,strappedupthevalise,shutthesafe,
lockedit,andhurriedoutontotheterrace。Hewasjustintimeto
seethelightsofasmallcarcometoahaltatthegate。A
passengersprangoutofitandadvancedswiftlytowardshim,whilethe
chauffeur,aheavilybuilt,elderlymanwithagraymoustache,settled
downlikeonewhoresignshimselftoalongvigil。
“Well?“askedVonBorkeagerly,runningforwardtomeethisvisitor。
Foranswerthemanwavedasmallbrown-paperparceltriumphantly
abovehishead。
“Youcangivemethegladhandto-night,mister,“hecried。“I”m
bringinghomethebaconatlast。”
“Thesignals?“
“SameasIsaidinmycable。Everylastoneofthem,semaphore,lamp
code,Marconi-acopy,mindyou,nottheoriginal。Thatwastoo
dangerous。Butit”stherealgoods,andyoucanlaytothat。”He
slappedtheGermanupontheshoulderwitharoughfamiliarityfrom
whichtheotherwinced。
“Comein,“hesaid。“I”mallaloneinthehouse。Iwasonly
waitingforthis。Ofcourseacopyisbetterthantheoriginal。If
anoriginalweremissingtheywouldchangethewholething。You
thinkit”sallsafeaboutthecopy?“
TheIrish-Americanhadenteredthestudyandstretchedhislong
limbsfromthearmchair。Hewasatall,gauntmanofsixty,with
clear-cutfeaturesandasmallgoateebeardwhichgavehimageneral
resemblancetothecaricaturesofUncleSam。Ahalf-smoked,sodden
cigarhungfromthecornerofhismouth,andashesatdownhe
struckamatchandrelitit。“Makingreadyforamove?“heremarkedas
helookedroundhim。“Say,mister,“headded,ashiseyesfellupon
thesafefromwhichthecurtainwasnowremoved,“youdon”ttellme
youkeepyourpapersinthat?“
“Whynot?“
“Gosh,inawide-opencontraptionlikethat!Andtheyreckonyou
tobesomespy。Why,aYankeecrookwouldbeintothatwitha
can-opener。IfI”dknownthatanyletterofminewasgoin”tolie
looseinathinglikethatI”dhavebeenamugtowritetoyouat
all。”
“Itwouldpuzzleanycrooktoforcethatsafe,“VonBorkanswered。
“Youwon”tcutthatmetalwithanytool。”
“Butthelock?“
“No,it”sadoublecombinationlock。Youknowwhatthatis?“
“Searchme,“saidtheAmerican。
“Well,youneedawordaswellasasetoffiguresbeforeyoucan
getthelocktowork。”Heroseandshowedadouble-radiatingdisc
roundthekeyhole。“Thisotheroneisfortheletters,theinnerone
forthefigures。”
“Well,well,that”sfine。”
“Soit”snotquiteassimpleasyouthought。Itwasfouryearsago
thatIhaditmade,andwhatdoyouthinkIchoseforthewordand
figures?“
“It”sbeyondme。”
“Well,IchoseAugustfortheword,and1914forthefigures,and
hereweare。”
TheAmerican”sfaceshowedhissurpriseandadmiration。
“My,butthatwassmart!Youhaditdowntoafinething。”
“Yes,afewofuseventhencouldhaveguessedthedate。Hereitis,
andI”mshuttingdownto-morrowmorning。”
“Well,Iguessyou”llhavetofixmeupalso。I”mnotstayingin
thisgol-darnedcountryallonmylonesome。Inaweekorless,from
whatIsee,JohnBullwillbeonhishindlegsandfairramping。I”d
ratherwatchhimfromoverthewater。”
“Butyou”reanAmericancitizen?“
“Well,sowasJackJamesanAmericancitizen,buthe”sdoingtimein
Portlandallthesame。ItcutsnoicewithaBritishcoppertotell
himyou”reanAmericancitizen。”It”sBritishlawandorderover
here”sayshe。Bytheway,mister,talkingofJackJames,itseemsto
meyoudon”tdomuchtocoveryourmen。”
“Whatdoyoumean?“VonBorkaskedsharply。
“Well,youaretheiremployer,ain”tyou?It”suptoyoutoseethat
theydon”tfalldown。Buttheydofalldown,andwhendidyouever
pickthemup?There”sJames-“
“ItwasJames”sownfault。Youknowthatyourself。Hewastoo
self-willedforthejob。”
“Jameswasabonehead-Igiveyouthat。ThentherewasHollis。”
“Themanwasmad。”
“Well,hewentabitwoozytowardstheend。It”senoughtomakea
manbughousewhenhehastoplayapartfrommorningtonightwitha
hundredguysallreadytosetthecopperswisetohim。Butnowthere
isSteiner-“
VonBorkstartedviolently,andhisruddyfaceturnedashadepaler。
“WhataboutSteiner?“
“Well,they”vegothim,that”sall。Theyraidedhisstorelast
night,andheandhispapersareallinPortsmouthjail。You”llgooff
andhe,poordevil,willhavetostandtheracket,andluckyifhe
getsoffwithhislife。That”swhyIwanttogetoverthewateras
soonasyoudo。”