by Petr Macek
Title Page
Sherlock Holmes
and
THE ADVENTURE OF THE COLD-SERVED REVENGE
Petr Macek
Publisher Information
Published in the UK by MX Publishing
335 Princess Park Manor
Royal Drive, London, N11 3GX
www.mxpublishing.com
Digital edition converted and distributed in 2014 by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
© Copyright 2014 Petr Macek
The right of Petr Macek to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998.
All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without express prior written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted except with express prior written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1956 (as amended). Any person who commits any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damage.
All characters appearing in this work are fictitious or used fictitiously. Except for certain historical personages, any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and not of MX Publishing.
Cover design by www.staunch.com
Foreword
The publishing sensation that I caused with my manuscript describing the case of Golem’s shadow took a long time to die down. Indeed it was here that I detected the true reason for Holmes’s retirement at the end of 1903, and thus finally eased my conscience. For many years I had been compelled to lie or at least mask the truth.
My promise to my publisher Mr Doyle, who had refused to print my work, still applied. I therefore undertook to write about another, less controversial case, but one that would still sate the public’s hunger for the adventures of Sherlock Holmes, while at the same time offering something new and unexpected. I had no desire to return to the years that I had already minutely described in several previous books.
The events of the spring of 1911 still loomed. I was no longer contributing to The Strand and Holmes had retired from public life. At no time earlier had there been a reason to make the case public. Indeed, for a number of years, up to the end of the Great War, parts of the case had been kept classified. I trust, therefore, that the reader will forgive me that in the interests of several highly placed people related to the royal family I have changed several names.
I am aware of the shame of letting these days fall into oblivion. Although while living through them old memories returned to us, some of them were unkind. But there is one man above all who deserves to be remembered: he who put us on the chessboard of this case and almost gave us mate.
Dr John H. Watson
February 13, 1927
I: The Ivory Cigarette Case
Back when the new century was growing into its adolescent years, when motorcars were replacing hansom cabs and gas was giving way to electricity, Sherlock Holmes and I saw much less of each other. He was occupied with beekeeping at his country farmstead in Fulworth near Eastbourne in Sussex, and I divided my time between my medical practice and my wife[1]. The days when the famed detective and I would plunge into London’s dank alleyways or struggle through the inhospitable marshes of innumerable counties in pursuit of a felon seemed irretrievably lost. Our intercourse was reduced to intermittent visits and only marginally more frequent correspondence.
At that time both of us were well into our sixth decade and enjoyed the dignity that was our due. On occasion, during my ambles through the city, I would stray inadvertently into Baker Street and pause nostalgically at 221B, where seventeen steps led to our old lodgings. But the number of steps was the only thing that had not changed. The apartment was occupied by new tenants; young people better adapted to their rapidly changing surroundings. Old buildings were being demolished and new ones were rising up in their place. Everything was being modernised. The explosion of building at the beginning of the twentieth century affected every aspect of life and trampled all that was old into the dust.
But I am not one to bemoan time’s ever-increasing pace or to linger in the past, with the exception, of course, of my literary accounts of our adventures. And so, on one of those visits to these parts, I only reminisced briefly about bygone glories before again returning home.
Indeed it was here that, quite unexpectedly, one of my last adventures with the great detective got underway. It began in the same way as many others; with a hastily written telegram sent in distress.
But this time there was one alarming difference: the telegram had been sent by our former housekeeper, Mrs Hudson, and directly concerned Sherlock Holmes!
My blood turned cold.
Alas those few words written on a slip of paper did not describe exactly what had occurred. Mrs Hudson only mentioned Holmes’s dire health and urged me to come as quickly as possible. I gathered that he had probably suffered a coronary thrombosis.
I replied at once to expect me tomorrow and reserved a seat on the morning train to Sussex.
That night I could not sleep. To my knowledge, except for a touch of rheumatism that he complained of in his letters, Holmes did not suffer from any grave ailment. I must concede, however, that his lifestyle during our years together was a recipe for a coronary. The strain and stress and his generally unbalanced regimen must surely have taken their toll. But why had they culminated now? After all, in recent years his sole occupations had been tranquil philosophising, literary studies, and a bit of farming.
On the journey the next day, despite the breath-taking view of sun-bathed fields and pastures from my compartment, I was beset by troubled thoughts. I did not even read the morning Times, the front page of which was devoted to the latest crisis in Morocco. France and Germany were vying for it with unceasing persistence. Each was attempting to forge an alliance with England, which only heightened already elevated tensions in Europe. The recent military defeats had been a shock to England’s self-confidence and had revealed the Empire’s unpreparedness for war. The paper speculated that King Edward’s[2] entente[3] had been an error that had led us away from our time-honoured Splendid Isolation[4]. The rest of the paper was full of tumultuous domestic reports: the Irish problem, suffragettes[5] and the demands of the working classes. Nothing new under the sun. Nothing to unburden my mind of its cares.
There was only one item all the way in the back of the foreign affairs column that piqued my interest, story about the violent death of the famous Italian factory owner Vito Minutti. He had been shot in his office right in the middle of the day and they only found his body several hours later. The culprit was being hunted by the police commissioner heading the investigation, who did not want to discuss suspects or motives. Clearly they were dumbfounded. Indeed, I had been infected by Holmesian scepticism towards the police and their work.
I only raised my eyes from Minutti’s obituary as the train pulled into the station. A coach was waiting for me and immediately took me to Cuckmere Haven[6]. For those last few miles before reaching my destination I sat on the coach box next to the coachman as though on tenterhooks. My heart was racing. I feared whether I might be too late.
Good Mrs Hudson, who had taken care of Holmes for many decades and had even left her native London to follow him to the countryside, was already waiting at th
e doorstep. As soon as she spied us she waved her hand and hurried over to the coach.
“Doctor! Dear doctor, thank God, I am so happy that you are here,” she cried, extending her arm towards me before the coach had even stopped.
“How is he?” I asked, in lieu of a greeting.
“The pastor is with him,” she said, breathing heavily. At her age she tired quickly and any excitement exhausted her.
I hopped down from the coach and gently embraced the diminutive woman.
“Last rights?” I gulped.
“Not yet,” she said, crossing herself. “Do not paint the devil on the wall or he will appear. Pastor Barlow is a friend of Mr Holmes; he runs this parish and often visits us. Today he came in order to cheer him up a little. In truth yesterday evening I feared that Mr Holmes would not live to see you.”
“What happened?” I inquired, while Mrs Hudson led me into the house.
“His heart, doctor, his heart,” she sighed. “For several weeks now it has been ailing him, but in the past few days it has gotten worse. He had his first heat attack the day before yesterday. The doctor prescribed him some medicine and confined him to bed, but he still does not look well. He is pale and listless and does not eat.”
I had guessed correctly.
“May I see him?”
“Yes of course, that is why I sent for you!” she said, tears forming in her eyes. Never had I seen her so wretched.
I quickly found my medical bag among my things and while the coachman unloaded the luggage Mrs Hudson and I entered the house.
As soon as I entered the vestibule I detected the unmistakable scent of Holmes’s tobacco − which some might call a stench − and which I could never forget. The house was permeated with it just as our old lodgings had been. I recollected the times before we lived together when I would return from visiting him. My clothes had been so redolent with his tobacco that I immediately had to take them to be laundered.
Mrs Hudson, who knew me almost as well as she knew Holmes, wiped the tears from her face and opened the window in the vestibule.
“Mr Holmes does not like drafts; they are bad for his back. Now perhaps it will not bother him. Were he to roam about the house I would chase him back to bed with a broom until he recovered!”
“You ought to stop plying him with that sinfully rich food you cook so magnificently,” said a voice above our heads, “and chase him immediately out into the sun so that he does not get in the way of your spring cleaning!”
From the stairway a large man in a black cloak and a bright white collar was descending with much huffing and puffing into the vestibule. Each step creaked under his weight and the banister groaned with the strain.
“You are right as always,” conceded the housekeeper sadly. “This is Mr Barlow, who I told you about. And you must certainly know Dr Watson so well from Mr Holmes’ tales that no introduction is necessary, isn’t that right Pastor?”
“It is an honour to finally meet you,” said Barlow, who having conquered the stairs was now shaking my hand vigorously. It glistened with sweat, just like his brow, the pate of his bald head and indeed his entire red face. It was difficult to say whether it was due to the heavy air in the house or some ailment.
Holmes had mentioned Barlow in one of his letters and I knew that he had recently become a frequent visitor at the house. Apparently this was due to their mutual fascination with philosophy and beekeeping. But now that I had the opportunity to scrutinise him, the jovial pastor’s most conspicuous feature was not the baldness of his head, nor the corpulence of his body, nor the dampness of his skin, but a glass eye. Unmistakeably fixed in his left eye socket, with a pupil painted on a matte background, it gave him the distinct impression of squinting.
“Holmes finally fell asleep,” said Barlow after we shook hands. “Sleep is good for him; I think that we ought to let him rest. What do you say, doctor, will you have a cup of tea with me meanwhile?”
His tone permitted no objection.
I would have preferred to immediately see my friend, and I must have subconsciously expressed this thought by frowning slightly, because the pastor put his arm around my shoulder and led me wordlessly into the drawing room. I did not prevent him. After all, regular rest is very important for patients with heart ailments.
The housekeeper hurried off to prepare some refreshments and Barlow and I reclined on a settee decorated with a hand-knitted throw rug made of Shetland wool. The pastor and I then spent more than an hour in friendly conversation over exquisite homemade apple cake and a pot of Ceylon tea, during which my opinion of him entirely altered. As unpleasant as my first impression of Barlow had been due to his appearance and devil’s eye, during our conversation he proved to be an intelligent and eloquent companion. I was not surprised that he had become Holmes’s friend.
“We first met last spring, when Mr Holmes developed a fascination with beekeeping,” he recounted. “I have been raising bees at my parish for several years, naturally he came to me for advice.”
“That is rather unusual for him.”
“He was worried about his dear bees. It was the first time he had ever encountered the bee plague[7], which requires very sophisticated intervention. An amateur alone, even a talented one, stands no chance. But together we succeeded in finding a remedy!”
“He must have been grateful.”
“My reward was finding a kindred spirit! In these parts one meets only farmers and peasants, who have little time for conversation or higher pursuits. At most you might see them in church on a Sunday. In Holmes I found someone with whom I could discuss much more than the cricket scores in the Eastbourne home league. No, Holmes was sent to me by the good Lord, and hopefully He will let him remain here a while longer.”
“I hope so too,” I said, gazing at the ceiling and glancing unwittingly at my pocket watch. It had been about twenty minutes since the last time I had checked it. The pastor correctly interpreted the gesture.
“I won’t detain you further,” he said smiling and wiping cake from his mouth. “I can see that you are eager to visit our patient. Perhaps he has gained strength enough to receive you. I believe that your visit will cheer him. We all hope that you will succeed in reviving him!”
It was most gracious of him to say so. I came to realise that this was indeed a man in his place. Though I reproached myself for not devoting enough time to my friend these past few years, I was relieved that my place at the side of the retired detective had been assumed by such a one as Barlow. I thanked him for his company, not only for those few moments that he had devoted to me, but also for the months that he had spent with Holmes. Then I walked him to the doorstep.
Now it was time to see my old friend! I grabbed my medical bag, ran upstairs to the bedroom, knocked and entered immediately.
Sherlock Holmes was in a condition in which I had never seen him. He was asleep, lying motionless in bed, with the blanket pulled up over his chest. His wrinkled hands were resting alongside his body and his bony fingers dug into the bed sheet with each raspy intake of breath. His face, turned towards the window, through which a few rays of sunlight passed through half closed blinds, was ashen and sickly.
What a ruin my friend had become! The illness must have stricken him more powerfully than Mrs Hudson or Barlow, who saw him daily, suspected. I, who had not seen Holmes in a long time, was caught off-guard by his physical condition.
He turned his face to me, apparently because I had wakened him when I entered the bedroom. He strained to focus his gaze, but recognised me immediately, for he spoke to me through parched mouth.
“Examine me closely, my dear Watson,” he said, coughing. “The body wastes away and slowly ceases to function. Regrettably the mind suffers even more, for it does not want to capitulate. Would you please give me some water?”
I did as he bade and sat down by th
e side of the bed.
“Nonsense, you look wonderful,” I said, trying to placate him, but Holmes was not easily deceived. He drank greedily and I propped up his pillow on the brass headboard so that he could sit upright and speak more comfortably.
“If Mrs Hudson summoned you, my condition must be dire.”
“Your deductions are misguided.”
“Indeed? What else is one to think? My friend, who in the past year has only sent me a few letters, suddenly appears at my bedside wearing a funereal expression and carrying a medical bag. But I am glad to see you, Watson. Had I known that it would draw you out of your London burrow, I would have fallen ill sooner.”
I ignored this gloomy talk and took my medical instruments out of the bag.
“When and how did your illness start?” I asked.
“Several weeks ago.”
“Can you be more specific?”
“I felt the first faint paroxysm of lassitude at the end of March, but I put it down to seasonal weariness. Soon thereafter I began to suffer from shortness of breath, pains and heartburn.”
“Why did you not inform me? I would have come immediately.”
“My dear fellow,” he said, smiling for the first time, “we are both of an age when we must expect these ailments. It would be strange indeed if nothing ailed us. And I did not anticipate that this minor affliction would worsen quite so quickly.”
“Minor affliction? For God’s sake, Holmes, you suffered a coronary! How can you be so flippant?”
“There is nothing else for it.”
I sighed and placed my stethoscope on his chest. His heart was beating at an alarming rate. His breath was quick and strong, as though he had just run a race. His blood pressure also caused me concern; it was obvious that the danger was far from averted. I put away the Pinard horn and Holmes buttoned up his shirt.
“What medicines did they prescribe you?”
Holmes pointed to a jug of water and a tin filled with pills resting on the bedside table. Everything was what I would have prescribed.