The women do not go in after them; and they are more
rubicund, and indeed more lively. Leech-catching is
not conducive to hilarity.
—EARLY REMINISCENCES
NEITHER FYFE NOR I was quite sure how Holmes had come to assume apparent control of the investigation, but the arrangement seemed to have at least tacit understanding on all sides. Fyfe took his somewhat bemused leave, having been reassured that Baring-Gould would be questioned when he woke as to his past communication with the man he knew as Randolph Pethering, and that information passed on to Fyfe.
Holmes closed the door behind Fyfe and leant back against it for a moment as if trying to bar any further complications from entering.
“That is a poser, is it not, Holmes?” I remarked.
He did not bother to answer, but pushed himself upright and walked back into the hall, where he stood looking oddly indecisive.
“Have you missed the train?” I asked. He waved it away as unimportant, then drew a crumpled packet of cigarettes from his pocket, pulled one out, lit it, and stood smoking while I put the maps and the second breakfast tray of the day in order.
“Let us go look at the bag Pethering left with the innkeeper,” he said decisively. He threw the half-smoked cigarette onto the logs, and swept out the door.
IT WAS A paltry offering that Pethering had left behind at the inn, comprising for the most part the “good” clothes he would not have needed while clambering over the moor. Holmes set aside the carefully folded if slightly threadbare grey suit, a silk tie that had the flavour of an aunt’s Christmas present, a white shirt that had been worn once since being laundered, and a pair of polished shoes with mends in both soles. We examined the rest: another shirt, both patched and in need of laundering, and a pair of thick socks, also dirty; a pen and a small block of lined paper; a yellowback novel with a sprung cover and water damage along its top edge (the product, I diagnosed, of a book dealer’s pavement display, already cheap but rendered nearly unsaleable by an unanticipated shower of rain), and a copy of a book by Baring-Gould that I had not found in his study, although I had been looking for it: his guide to Devon.
I picked up the guidebook, checked the inside cover for a name and found the first sheet carefully torn out. Pethering concealing his own name, perhaps, or was this book stolen from a library? I turned to the index and found Dartmoor, thumbed through to the central section on the moor, and found that Pethering had been there before me. He had used a tentative hand and a pencil with hard lead, but had made up for his lack of assertiveness in sheer quantity, correcting Baring-Gould’s spelling, changing the names of some locations, and writing comments, annotations, and disagreements that crowded the side margins and flipped over onto the top and bottom.
I held out a random page to Holmes, who was busy dismantling a patent pencil. “Would you say this handwriting belongs to Pethering?”
He glanced at it and went back to the object in his hands. “Without a doubt.”
“Do you think Fyfe would object to my borrowing it? Even without Pethering’s comments, I had intended to read the book, only I couldn’t find a copy in the study.”
“You may have noticed that the study is now largely inhabited by volumes no one has valued enough to carry off. Gould keeps this book in the drawer of his bedside table along with his New Testament and Book of Common Prayer. And no, I’m sure Fyfe would not notice it gone.”
“Baring-Gould keeps a guide to Devon in his bedside table?” I said. It seemed an odd place to find it, particularly as the man could scarcely see to read, even in a bright light.
“Sentimentality, I suppose.” Holmes gave up on the pencil and tossed it back in the bag. “He can no longer get onto the moor, and can’t even see it from the house, so he keeps his books easily to hand, along with one or two photographs and a sheaf of sketches.” His words and gesture were so matter-of-fact as to be dismissive, but the lines etched on his face were not so casual.
I was so struck by the poignancy of the image that I did not think about his words until we had left the inn and were going down the hill towards Lew House.
“You said he keeps his books beside his bed. What are the others?”
“Just Devon and his book on Dartmoor. Oh, and a few manuscript copies of some of the songs he collected.”
“I should very much like to look at the Dartmoor book.”
“He wouldn’t mind, I’m sure. It’s not particularly rare, just something he treasures.”
“Good. Now, how are we dividing up?”
“I shall follow Pethering’s track up onto the moor, if you hunt down Miss Baskerville in Plymouth.”
I had known he would suggest this particular arrangement rather than its reverse—even towards me, Holmes was usually gallant about shouldering the less comfortable tasks. Of course, this meant he took possession of the more interesting leads as well, but in this case I would not argue for the privilege of walking back out onto the moor. I merely asked when the next train left Coryton. Holmes took his watch from an inside pocket and glanced at it.
“Mrs Elliott will have an ABC, but I believe you’ll find going to Lydford will put you on a train in a bit under two hours.”
That would leave me time to change from my habitual trousers into the more appropriate all-purpose tweed skirt I had brought. Coming past the stables, I put my head inside and asked Mr Dunstan please to get the dog cart ready again. I smiled a sympathetic apology at his sigh of patient endurance, and trotted up to the house to pack the overnight bag I was sure to need.
Holmes came in as I was standing and surveying the room to see what I had forgotten. He held out a book.
“Gould says he hopes you find it of interest.”
“Thank you Holmes,” I said, and put it in the bag, first removing Pethering’s copy of A Book of the West : Devon, whose tiny, pale annotations would, I knew, prove diabolical in the poor light and movement of the train. “Did Baring-Gould have any idea where to find Pethering?”
“He filed the man’s letters down in the study, although he is certain the address was only care of the university. I’ll dig them out before I go, and send them to Fyfe.”
“Will you go tonight, or wait until the morning?”
“It will save me nearly two hours of daylight if I stop the night in Bridestowe or Sourton and set out at dawn. And unless I come across a problem, I ought to be back here Monday.”
The “problem” he might stumble across could very well be related to the problem that had landed Pethering in the lake. Without looking at him, I asked, “Are you taking a revolver with you?”
“Yes.”
I nodded, and fastened my bag shut.
“Good hunting,” he told me.
“And you, Holmes,” I answered, and to myself added, Just don’t you become the prey.
IT MIGHT HAVE been faster to walk to Lydford, but I did arrive relatively unsullied by mud, and reached the station with ten minutes to spare. I walked up and down the platform in an attempt to keep warm, my breath steaming out as the sun sank low in the sky, taking with it any heat the day might have had. As usually happens, the clearing of the skies meant a sharp drop in temperature. There would be frost on the ground tonight, and tomorrow Holmes would find the moor a bitter place.
The train when it came was well populated, which was a blessing in disguise, for the carriages were old and draughty, and the only source of heat in my compartment was the three other passengers. We huddled in our overcoats (the others had the insight, or experience, to have brought travelling rugs) and watched the ice gather on the corners of the windows. It was far too cold to read, even if I had been able to turn the pages with gloved fingers. Instead, I wrapped my arms around to keep them and me warm, hunched my shoulders, and endured.
We stopped in every village that possessed more than six houses. It was black night when the train shuddered into Plymouth, although only eight o’clock. I stumbled towards a taxi and had the driver take me to
whatever he judged to be the best hotel in town, where I took a room, a hot bath, and some dinner. It was too late to call on Miss Baskerville anyway, I told myself, and climbed into bed with the Book of Dartmoor.
Dartmoor was the essential Baring-Gould: quirky, dogmatic, wildly enthusiastic, and as scattered as a blast from a bird gun. We began with quaking bogs, stepping into which he compared to a leisurely investigation of the underside of a duvet, adding with heavy-handed whimsy that whether or not the man who conducts such an investigation “will be able to give to the world benefit of his observations may be open to question.”
He then moved on to the beauties of furze, the glories of furze-blossom honey, tors, whortleberries, and tenements, Chinese orthography and customs, flint arrowheads and Christian saints, the rheumatic attack of Archbishop Lawrence, the peculiar phosphorescent characteristics of the moss Schistostega osmundaca, the Domesday book, dolmens, menhirs, and country roads. When he began to discuss the “twaddle and rubbish” of the Druid-supporting archaeologists I roused slightly, thinking of poor, mysterious Pethering, but Baring-Gould’s discussion of the wind atop Brentor soothed me, and by the time he hit Elizabethan tin works and mediaeval adits, my eyelids were descending.
And then the word gold caught my eye, and I was jerked out of my torpor:
That gold was found in the granite rubble of the stream beds is likely [wrote Baring-Gould, adding] A model of a gold-washing apparatus was found on the moor a few years ago. It was made of zinc.
Full stop. That, it appeared, was all the Reverend Sabine Baring-Gould had to say about gold, although I read on attentively for another hundred pages while the author discussed such compelling topics as a forty-year-long lawsuit, the comparative vegetation of the east and west sides of the moor, the Welsh “martyr maid” St Winefred, the sycamore versus the beech, and the benefits of Dartmoor air for young men with weak lungs; nary a word about gold, or even the machines with which to wash it, or why I might care that they were made of zinc.
In disgust I shut down the light and pulled the bedclothes up to my chin. Despite the length of the day and the almost complete lack of sleep the two previous nights, I did not drift off for a long time, but lay contemplating the image of Josiah Gorton’s hidden phial with its pinch of gold granules.
20
But to return to family portraits. That, in spite of the
influx of fresh blood from all quarters, a certain family
type remains, one can hardly doubt in looking through a
genuine series of family pictures.
—OLD COUNTRY LIFE
THE FIRST THING I saw in the formal drawing room of Miss Baskerville’s house the following afternoon was the portrait of a Cavalier with fair ringlets and a stern, thin-lipped face, dressed in black velvet and a lace collar, taking possession of his surroundings from his place above the fire.
It had taken me some time to gain entrance to the room and the Cavalier’s presence, for although I had been at the door at what I had thought a sufficiently early hour for a Sunday morning, the mistress of the house had already left.
The housemaid could not tell me precisely where her lady had gone, although she was happy to tell me that it was her habit of a Sunday morning to call on any of a number of her father’s old and retired servants who lived in the area, enquiring as to their wants and transporting them to their respective churches (or, in one case, chapel). She would then arrive for the midday services at her own church, before dismissing her driver to attend to the redistribution of the old retainers to their homes, and walk home or, if the weather was too foul, wait at the rectory until her motorcar came to take her home.
I therefore had been obliged to take my place in the back of the Victorian monstrosity where she worshipped, which, even though I claimed a seat directly over a vent from the floor heating, was nonetheless intensely cold until about two-thirds of the way through the service, when the heat suddenly shot on and had us steaming and discreetly shedding garments.
During the sermon I reflected on something Mrs Elliott had mentioned in passing, that Mr Baring-Gould was one of those all-too-rare proponents of the ten-minute, single-topic sermon, to the extent that he would begin to clear his throat if an underling went to fifteen minutes, and rise briskly to his feet at twenty. This particular specimen of the clergy before me did not suffer from brevity of speech, although he compensated by displaying a considerable brevity of both wit and learning. The stout, sweating man beside me was kept from snores only by the sharpness of his wife’s elbow.
The housemaid had given me a fair description of the lady I was seeking, and after the service had finally broken up I approached her outside on the pavement where she was pulling on her gloves and talking with friends. I waited until the friends had finished their business, a luncheon arrangement for the following week, and as they departed and she turned to go, I stepped to her side.
“Miss Baskerville, I believe?”
“Yes?” she asked.
“My name is Mary Russell. I’m a friend of the Reverend Sabine Baring-Gould, who asked me to look you up while I was in town.” Which was not strictly true, but the look of reserved politeness she gave me was clear evidence that, while she knew who he was, she was not about to be mentioning my small deception in any casual letter or future conversation.
Our gloves clasped briefly while I explained that her housemaid had told me how to find her, and asked if I might walk back with her.
“Certainly,” she said, not sounding at all certain.
“There are a few questions I need to ask you,” I said as we turned in the direction of her house, and began to explain the bare outlines of my (unnamed) husband’s longtime friendship with Baring-Gould, the reverend gentleman’s state of health, and the memoirs he was trying to assemble.
She was a small, neat woman, who listened with her head bent and whose steps began briskly, only to slow with her increasing involvement in the story. She did not seem over gifted with a subtlety of mind, becoming only more confused as we went, and although she appeared anxious to be of service to the squire of Lew Trenchard, that old friend of her father’s, she did not know what she could do for me. On her doorstep, she turned to me and said just that.
“Might I come in for a short time?” I suggested.
“Of course. Perhaps you will take luncheon with me?”
I assured her it was not necessary; she assured me it was no inconvenience; she gave instructions to the housemaid who had taken our things that two places were to be set at the table; and she then ushered me into the drawing room.
Aside from the painting of Sir Hugo, the room was light and feminine, with walls of cream and apricot and flowered-fabric chairs and draperies. It was not to my personal taste, but it was, I could easily see, tastefully if conventionally done.
“Would you like a glass of sherry, Miss Russell? I don’t drink, myself, but …”
A hot rum toddy might have served to drive away the chill of the walk, but as that was not offered, and considering my hostess’ abstinence, I declined. The hot tea we were brought instead was a help, although, not having spent the morning fasting, as she apparently had, I had not much use for the bland biscuits that accompanied it.
I waited while she performed her duties over the teapot, studying her and trying to choose the best approach to take. I had quickly decided that, while this woman was no foe, and could not possibly be siding with Scheiman or Ketteridge in whatever it was they were up to, at the same time she would not make much of an ally. Sympathetic she might be, particularly towards her former neighbours, but she was completely lacking in anything resembling imagination: One need only look at the portrait of Sir Hugo, glaring down across the chintz and fringes like an accountant with a highly unsavoury private life, to know the woman bereft of perception.
I had to admit that the resemblance between Sir Hugo and Scheiman was faint, and that I should almost certainly have seen nothing had Holmes not planted the idea in my mind. The th
in mouth, yes, and the general shape of the eye, but Scheiman’s face, though thin, lacked the hardness of this portrait, and the cold disapproval behind the painted eyes was something I had never seen in those of Ketteridge’s secretary. It came to me suddenly that Sir Hugo’s portraitist had been afraid of his subject; moreover, I thought the fear justified.
“Miss Russell?” Startled, I turned to the small blond woman in the demure grey dress. A tiny frown line furrowed her smooth brow and abruptly, my mind being no doubt receptive for such a thing, I could see the line furrowing David Scheiman’s brow, the night Holmes and I had taken dinner in Baskerville Hall. Just as quickly, I dismissed the sureness that tried to accompany the revelation, reminding myself firmly that two frown lines did not a nefarious plot make. However, I also decided, taking the cup she was holding out to me, that I was not going to tell her as much as I might have had that line not appeared.
“That is a very interesting picture,” I said. “It looks quite old.”
“The date on the back is 1647,” she said. “It is a distant relative of mine, Sir Hugo Baskerville. He is said to have been a rather naughty fellow, although I can’t say he looks it. I rather like the design of the lace on his collar.”
“Do you have many of the old family portraits?” I asked innocently. “I mean to say, Mr Baring-Gould told me that yours is an old family, and I imagine there must have been quite a few pictures.”
“I did bring two or three with me when I sold the house to Mr Ketteridge.” She settled back into her chair for a nice, light latter-church sort of conversation with a new acquaintance. “There was a Reynolds of my great-great-grandfather that was rather valuable, and a nice portrait of a lady in a blue dress that just matched the boudoir set—I couldn’t part with her—and of course the Sargent portraits of my parents. I hadn’t actually intended to bring Sir Hugo—he seemed to go with the Hall, somehow, and I thought it might be best not to bring too many reminders of past glories, as it were. But Mr Ketteridge insisted I take it. In fact, he came down from the Hall himself with it wrapped in a sheet, saying he couldn’t bear for me to lose all of my family, and after all, Sir Hugo is a little bit famous. Do you know the story that Mr Conan Doyle called The Hound of the Baskervilles?”
The Mary Russell Series Books 1-4 Page 110