by Amy Thomas
Title Page
THE DETECTIVE, THE WOMAN, AND THE WINKING TREE
A Novel of Sherlock Holmes
Amy Thomas
Publisher Information
First edition published in 2013 by MX Publishing
335 Princess Park Manor, Royal Drive, London, N11 3GX
www.mxpublishing.com
Digital edition converted and distributed in 2012 by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
© Copyright 2013 Amy Thomas
The right of Amy Thomas to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her 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. 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 by Mary Smiecinski
Among these unfinished tales is that of Mr. James Phillimore, who, stepping back into his own house to get his umbrella, was never more seen in this world.
- The Problem of Thor Bridge
Dedication
For The Baker Street Babes, my partners in crime.
Acknowledgements
The joy of writing this book was greatly enhanced by the support of my family. I am forever grateful for the unparalleled editing skills of Chris and Ashley Thomas, who gave hours of their time to help make it the best it could be. In addition, David Thomas’s encouragement kept me going when I needed it most.
Designer Mary Smiecinski continues to astonish me with her artistic talent and selfless generosity. She never fails to amaze me with her ability to bring words and themes to visual life.
My two writing partners, Christy McDougall and Megan Hendrix, deserve my undying gratitude for their kindness and patience. Their friendship is a constant gift.
I am also grateful for the inspiration of my fellow Baker Street Babes, who make me laugh endlessly and think deeply about what it means to love Sherlock Holmes. I treasure their perspectives.
I also owe much appreciation to Steve Emecz of MX Publishing. His kindness, wisdom, and expertise have assisted me in many ways.
Finally, I am thankful for the many authors who have paved the way for me by writing brilliantly about Sherlock Holmes. His creator deserves the greatest praise, but behind him comes a long line of brilliant minds who have taken his creation and made him their own. This book would not have happened without their efforts.
The Beginning
The wedding of Edward Cox Rayburn and Julia Ellworth Stevenson was, without a doubt, the biggest event in the village of Fulworth since Mr Percival’s sheep overran the parish graveyard. I preferred the latter event - I didn’t have to perform, and I was allowed to laugh. Nevertheless, I couldn’t refuse when Julia’s overexcited mother begged me to try to wrest something resembling music from the ancient piano in the front room of the Stevenson abode for the benefit of wedding party and guests.
I watched the crowd as I played and sang after the ceremony. Father Murphy, the vicar, stood next to the banister, eating cake and listening to Mrs Dunaway, who, from her level of animation, appeared to be extolling the virtues of her “little darling Annabel,” a child of thirteen who was neither little nor darling in my estimation. The Rayburns, family of the groom, looked slightly uncomfortable in the Stevenson home. They were well aware that their son’s legacy as a country farmer was not looked at with boundless favour by Charles Stevenson, a barrister who had only been moved to give his consent by several weeks of his daughter’s tears. I knew this as everyone did. Villages have few secrets.
Julia herself clung to the arm of her groom and smiled radiantly, nearly as tall as her new husband. I thought her the much stronger-willed of the two, though Edward’s affable grin gave a hint of the kind heart he possessed. He wasn’t handsome. His face was a rough-hewn, homemade thing rather than a piece of high art, but I thought I understood his appeal.
My eyes had drifted toward the other side of the room, where, unmarried and on the prowl, Maria Ramsden was talking determinedly at the oblivious butcher, when something occurred that eclipsed even the wedding in the local consciousness. Mrs Phillimore of Oakhill Farm burst through the front door, nearly collapsing with breathlessness, her seven-year-old daughter Eliza by her side. “James is gone,” she panted, as soon as she was able.
I had wondered why the Phillimores were not in attendance at the wedding. Edith Phillimore was the sort of person who never missed a chance to socialise. In contrast, her husband was taciturn and given to moods, as it was described locally, but seemed entirely devoted to his wife and followed her everywhere. Their absence had struck me as strange, but the events of the day had left me little time to ponder it.
The vicar was the first to react to the dramatic entrance, moving quickly toward the distraught woman and placing a large hand on her shoulder. “Gone, Mrs Phillimore? Gone where?”
“I haven’t the slightest idea!” she said, looking as if she might burst into tears. “He only went inside to get his umbrella, and then - he wasn’t there any more.”
***
“Thanks from Colonel Digby for the return of his dog. An invitation to Lord Lewisham’s party. A request to help Simon Bainbridge find out who’s been stealing from him. I’ll send that to Lestrade. Even he can’t be fool enough to miss the secretary’s obvious motive.” One by one, Sherlock Holmes took up sealed envelopes, deduced their contents, and discarded them without deigning to open them.
Finally, his flatmate handed him the parcel he’d saved for last, a neat, square box covered in brown paper. “The Woman,” said Holmes quickly. “High-quality dark rosin, an early birthday gift.”
“Not honey this time?” asked Watson.
“Certainly not. The shape is entirely wrong, and there’s a stain on the outside of the paper where the rosin dripped.” Holmes took the parcel from his friend and carefully untied the strings, revealing a box containing a tin of rosin, just as he’d expected, and, to his annoyance, a jar of honey as well. He looked up and met Watson’s eye. The doctor was smiling broadly.
The detective pulled a note from the recesses of the package and, as he had not done with the rest of his post, he opened it and read the contents aloud:
Dear Mr Holmes and Dr Watson,
I hope this parcel finds you well. You will undoubtedly already have discerned that the tin of rosin is meant for Holmes, while the honey belongs to Dr Watson, who, I recall, enjoyed it immensely during your last visit.
Now for my primary purpose, which is to recount a puzzling situation. A week ago, the parish saw the wedding of a farmer’s son and barrister’s daughter, an occurrence overshadowed by the disappearance of a moderately prosperous farmer, who vanished without a trace as his family was preparing to leave for the ceremony. The local constabulary combed the village and surrounding country, and official reinforcements were sent from London, but none of them uncovered anything that pointed to the man’s whereabouts. Knowing me as you do, you will realise that I have not been idle. I
enclose a list of my observations and ask for your suggestion as to which line of enquiry I should pursue.
Yours truly,
Irene Adler
Holmes handed the second sheet of paper to his companion, who peered at it in the lamplight. “Read it to me, please,” said the detective, leaning back into his chair and putting his fingertips together in front of him. Watson’s steady voice filled his brain with images:
1) The missing man, James Phillimore, is 38 years old, husband to Edith and father to Eliza.
2) He has been in possession of his family’s farm since his father’s death five years ago.
3) He is financially solvent but not wealthy.
4) Edith claims he did not seem agitated on the day of the wedding.
5) His disappearance occurred when he re-entered the family abode, ostensibly to fetch his umbrella, and was not seen again.
6) No physical evidence can be found that he left the farmhouse by the back entrance.
7) According to the police, the house itself shows no evidence of foul play.
8) No motive can be found for Edith herself to have done violence to her husband.
9) The umbrella is still in the house.
“Infuriating woman,” muttered Holmes, which caused his flatmate to stare with a certain amount of astonishment. “She means to lure me to Fulworth with these half-truths.”
“Half-truths?”
“A great deal of surface fact, but no specifics about her observations of individuals and relationships,” explained the detective. “Those she saves for my visit.”
“And will you go?”
“Of course I’ll go. I have nothing else on at present.” Holmes glared at the frankly amused expression on his friend’s face. “You will accompany me?”
“I’m afraid not.” The doctor looked mildly apologetic. “I have a dinner engagement at the home of Miss Willow in three days’ time.” The detective did not answer, but his exit from the room was decidedly icy.
Oh, she has turned all the men’s heads down in that part.
- A Scandal in Bohemia
Chapter 1: Irene
“You are a most charming woman, Miss Adler, most charming indeed,” droned the nasal voice, as thick fingers wrote slowly in a yellowed notebook. “I’ve no doubt Inspector Graves will be delighted to hear your - observations on the case.”
I had no doubt of two things. The first was that Sergeant Chipping would have been instantly less enamored of my charms if he could have heard my thoughts, and the second was that Inspector Graves, if he ever did hear my observations, would receive some version of them that would make me sound like a busybody and a fool. At such moments, I could have cursed my pretty face. Oh, how I missed Holmes, to whom facts were facts, regardless of who delivered them.
Finally, the burly policeman closed his notebook and smiled down at me, and I had the terrible premonition he intended to say something personal. I put on my iciest and most discouraging expression and was apparently successful, because he dropped his gaze and left the front room of my cottage, rather like a chastened puppy. I smiled to myself. I didn’t dislike the man particularly, just his utter lack of original thought.
Ten minutes after his exit, I heard an unceremoniously loud knock at my front door. I opened it to find a tall, thin man holding a black bag and a violin case.
“Hello, Holmes,” I said, failing to keep my mouth from curving up into a half-smirk.
“Good afternoon, Irene,” said his low voice. “I hope you’re prepared for a lodger. It’s the least you can offer after your transparent effort to lure me here.”
“An effort I doubted would be anywhere near so successful,” I said, peering behind him. “Is Dr Watson not here?”
“Dr Watson,” huffed Holmes, “is courting a Miss Willow.”
“Ah,” I said, thinking I understood the reason for his short temper. “Come in. Mrs Turner is shopping in the village, but I can put the kettle on.”
Holmes came into the house and deposited his things in the larger of the two guest rooms, a ponderously-decorated space with dark curtains and heavy wood furnishings. It suited him quite well, I thought, and he had naturally claimed it for his own during his visits. Dr Watson always took the smaller of the guest rooms, which was lighter and more cheerful.
I made tea and took out a plate of Mrs Turner’s excellent biscuits, then joined Holmes in the sitting room, where he was seated comfortably in the one gothic-looking piece of furniture I owned, a plush black wing chair.
“You look very well,” he observed, with a scowl that belied his words in a comical fashion.
“As do you,” I said, speaking relatively. Holmes always looked uncommonly thin, but his eyes were bright and clear, and he seemed vigorous.
“Of course I’m well,” he groused, putting long fingers through his dark hair.
“Well and cross,” I murmured, smiling. “But I will speak to you of the case, and perhaps that will cheer you.” Holmes looked daggers at me in response to my school marm-ish tone, but I could tell that he was eager to hear the full story of the disappearance of James Phillimore. I leaned back on the flowered sofa and prepared to speak.
“Holmes, do you wish me to begin with the sequence of events, or with my assessment of what is important?” To look at my companion, it seemed as if I was speaking to a person deep in meditation or sleep, but I knew that the detective’s closed eyes and relaxed body concealed a mind that was acutely aware of all it heard.
“Your discoveries, if you please,” he said. “The order of events I divined from your letter and from the perusal of a local paper, which I purchased upon my arrival.”
“Very well,” I said, unsurprised. I knew that Holmes was not overly fond of personal conjecture, but I had rightly judged that he knew my mind’s capabilities and respected its processes enough to admit space for my observations.
“As I informed you, Phillimore was last seen when his family was preparing to attend a wedding, the nuptials of Julia Stevenson and Edward Rayburn, which is where I’ll begin. I had known for some time that the Stevensons did not consider Edward a suitable son-in-law, since Charles Stevenson is a barrister and had more elevated hopes for his daughter. For their part, the Rayburns were equally proud of their agricultural heritage, but they liked Julia, who did not share her family’s disdain. If Charles had gotten his way, the wedding would never have taken place, but I understand from village gossip that Julia wore him down with ceaseless tears and entreaties.”
I leaned forward, resting my elbows on my knees, and stared intently at Holmes, though he did not acknowledge my increased intensity in any outward way. “My acquaintance with Julia,” I continued, “is not a close one, but from what I have observed of her character, I believe her desperation was played as a calculated move to extract her father’s blessing, rather than out of any genuine despair.”
“You believe she did not love her fiancé?”
“Not so,” I answered, “but I do not believe her to be the kind of woman to ever succumb to that extent of hysteria.”
“Love has done stranger things to the human mind,” Holmes’s deep voice rejoined, “but let us move away from the uncharted territory of psychological supposition.”
“Very well,” I said. “I simply wished to begin by briefly sketching the characters who feature prominently in the drama.”
“Continue,” said Holmes, stretching out his long legs in front of him.
“The groom, Edward Rayburn, I have had occasion to meet a few times, since I often accompany Mrs Turner to purchase milk and eggs from his family’s produce. He is well situated on a vast farm a few miles outside the village. I understand him to be more than able to support a wife and family. The Stevenson objection is generally known to concern his lack of elegance and social prominence, as opposed t
o a financial deficiency.” I was silent for a moment as I bit into a chocolate biscuit and allowed the combination of sweetness and bitterness to delight my tongue.
“Almost as soon as I learned of Phillimore’s disappearance, I began looking for connections between him and the families involved in the wedding, in case his absence should have to do with the particular event for which his family was bound. The associations are certainly ample, but they do not strike me as unusual. The Rayburns bought a horse from the Phillimores two months ago, and Charles Stevenson has given the Phillimore family legal advice once or twice over the past several years. Fulworth is not large, as you know, and the majority of its residents and those from the surrounding farms are connected in similar ways to one another.”
“Another of my primary objectives, once it became clear that no man or corpse would be recovered easily, was to gain understanding of the missing farmer’s family. Edith, his wife, is well liked in the village for her gregariousness, but her husband is known to be her opposite in temperament. I have seen him at many social events, standing near a door or side of a room, looking completely discontented until his eyes light on his wife, whom he appears to adore. Their only child, Elizabeth, is seven years old and seems uncommonly intelligent, from what I have observed.”
Just then, the door opened, admitting Mrs Turner, tall and imposing in her black dress and black hat. “Good afternoon, Mr Holmes,” she said, looking him up and down with a sharp eye. “You’ve not had anything decent to eat in weeks, I’ll wager.” Her disdain for Mrs Hudson’s cooking was legendary, though I could not ascertain that she had ever encountered it personally. “I see you’ve produced tea, Miss Adler,” she continued. Produced was the word she invariably used instead of made in these cases, since she believed me incapable of concocting a truly legitimate tea.
“Yes,” I said, smiling. Her severity had the perverse effect of amusing me and making me adore her, a fact that I had been concerned might dismay her at the beginning of my time at the cottage. I had quickly realised, however, that for all her crossness, she enjoyed my affection.