Castle Rouge

Home > Mystery > Castle Rouge > Page 40
Castle Rouge Page 40

by Carole Nelson Douglas


  The conjoined light revealed a horribly familiar face, the dark hair a disheveled frame to an even more disordered expression of frantic fear, the pale blue eyes staring into mine with confused recognition.

  “The Master,” James Kelly demanded, shaking my wrist. “Where is He? Tell me!”

  I shrank against the wall, whose safety I had resented but moments before.

  He looked around in the dark as if seeing other eyes that I could not.

  “They did not want me here. They wanted me locked up in Paris, but I escaped them all and when I found the Master, they fled. Away from me. They left me to the dogs and wolves.”

  That I could well believe. Even in the flickering candlelight I could see that his clothing was as disordered as his hair and expression. He looked as if he had been clambering through wildwood for the past two weeks.

  And perhaps he had been.

  “The Master is the Only One,” he murmured, his frantic tone becoming pleading, almost weeping. “He understands. He has walked the same way of the Cross. We know the suffering, the pain, the same happy flaw that all men do, that all women caused since Eve.”

  His diseased eyes fixed on me again. I remembered how he had taken a pocket knife and drilled into his wife’s ear, for no reason, so that she died horribly a day later in hospital. He had been in the cavern under the Paris exposition grounds where the woman had been horribly mutilated by a madman. Had that been the Master? But Red Tomahawk’s battle-axe had been flung into that devil’s back even as he flaunted his gory trophy.

  James Kelly held only a candle now, and the madness in his eyes, but he had seen me among the motley rescue party in the cavern and gone straight for me, as he had in his rooms when he was trapped there by Irene and Pink and I. And Sherlock Holmes.

  Perhaps I reminded him of someone: his innocent and dead wife, or the poor girl whose breast had been sacrificed to some satanic ritual, or our mother Eve….

  “Where is He?” he pled, as if he did not recognize me.

  Of course he didn’t! My hair was wound in braids around my head like a peasant’s. From the waist up I was dressed like a Gypsy, and we knew that the cult members had either employed or traveled with the Gypsies. The sight of my borrowed trousers might have maddened him more, but they were black and lost in the darkness. I looked, I realized, like any one of the Gypsy girls who worked around their camp outside or the castle inside.

  “Is He not here to change wine into holy water and holy water into blood? He must be here! I have followed. This is my body, in which pleasure resides. This is my blood, in which pain resides. Whoever shall drink my blood and share my sin shall obtain life everlasting.”

  He was reciting a chillingly garbled blend of Scriptures and Satanism.

  I tried to twist my wrist free, but his grip tightened. He pressed me against the wall.

  “You’re coming to the ceremony, of course. To dance, and drink the Master’s blood and feel the flames of the Spirit descend like a cloak and then comes the madness and then we renounce it all, some forever.”

  He clearly meant death. I recalled my unexpectedly effective kick with Medved the previous night and prepared to repeat it.

  That is when he laid the knife blade against my throat.

  This knife was longer than a clasp knife that could be folded into a pocket, long enough that blade and handle spanned my entire neck.

  Fear was like a noose that would strangle me before he could cut me. I was entirely alone with a raving mad Jack the Ripper. No hat pin remained to strike out with, no companions bearing candles stirred anywhere in the vast empty dark to come to my rescue.

  “Don’t you want to wait for the ceremony?” I asked, trying to speak without moving my throat against the sharp steel brink it was poised upon like a diver on a cliff.

  “Sometimes before, but usually after the ceremony,” he said dreamily, the eerily vacant blue eyes becoming even vaguer. “I go and do likewise, as the Master commands. By myself. As I did with my wife. It was her fault, you know. She was on me for the drink, but the drink is the Life. The holy water is the Blood.”

  I didn’t know how to answer such gibberish, but I didn’t have to.

  Out of the dark came a figure almost as dark. It caught James Kelly by the collar and pulled him away so swiftly and violently as if to fling him down into Hell itself. Instead the avenging angel smashed him into the wall beside me, and bent to strip him of something, probably the knife. Kelly’s candle had gone out like a shuttered lantern.

  In the flicker of my own candle, which I still held for some strange reason, I recognized the keeper of my silver smelling salts and Godfrey’s note.

  “You!” I burst out in accusation.

  “Quickly!” returned a thrillingly, thoroughly English voice. “Step aside while I deal with this villain.”

  My free wrist was seized as I was pushed into the deeper dark so speedily that my tiny candle flame finally gave up the ghost and expired.

  Footsteps pounded the hollow earth and stone as two men contended in the utter dark, one with the frenzied strength of the mad. I heard the huffing of wild boars. I heard boot-soles scrabbling like hooves as their owners fought for balance and dominance. It was easy to imagine two supernatural forces in contention.

  I edged along the cold stone wall, for that fierce contention could propel them into me and I would be gravely hurt by that mortal struggle. And I needed to be ready to escape should the wrong man triumph. I had not been in the fearful presence of men meeting like wild stags since Colonel Moran had waylaid Quentin and me on the Hammersmith Bridge. In each case a defender sought my safety, but first he must fight for his survival in a mindless, fierce battle that made me momentarily irrelevant to either party.

  I could not even witness this titanic struggle, but simply heard the rough violence of it. I should not know who had won until…until it was too late perhaps.

  A guttural, anguished cry was followed by the thumping of a body to hard ground.

  The winner panted hard in the dark silence. I could tell no man by his breathing and held my own breath.

  In a moment a groping hand brushed my arm in the dark.

  At that touch, I was possessed by a wild surmise. How could I have not seen! The swarthy skin, the bizarre, flowing, Gypsy garb…hadn’t Quentin Stanhope been similarly disguised and dressed as an Arab when he had fallen unconscious at my feet in Paris more than a year ago? He was a spy…and more, he could go to ground in the treacherous East like a native born. Of course, the moment I had gone missing Irene would have called upon his aid. Quentin had been the Gypsy who had contrived to deliver food to my door. I should have known from the first, by that quite inappropriate wink from the supposed Gypsy.

  How obtuse I had been! And now I knew that it was his hand that reached for me in the dark. My heart galloped as if my Gypsy boots were running off with me. I leaned against the wall, breathless, as I felt his form draw close to me.

  “It is you!” I managed to whisper.

  “Quite.” A lucifer flared, and my fallen candle warmed to life and light again.

  I gazed up at the dashing figure, his eyes cast down at the candle’s stuttering flame.

  When he had surprised me in soldier’s guise on the train from Prague I had swooned, but he had caught me. I did feel oddly lightheaded now and wondered what form his greeting would take once the necessities were addressed.

  “Are you all right,” he was saying, “my—”

  “Quentin,” I breathed.

  He froze for an unguarded instant as he saw my face in the candlelight.

  “Good God, no! So you are indeed all right, Miss Huxleigh?”

  The sentence was long enough, and the voice now strong enough that I realized my dreadful mistake in an instant.

  “I am reasonably…well,” I said stiffly.

  “Good. I could use something to bind him with. You don’t have anything—? No. I will have to improvise.”

  Sherlock Holmes in
Gypsy guise lowered the candle to reveal the unconscious form of James Kelly as he bent over it.

  I was so humiliated by my error that I determined to provide what he wanted.

  “As a matter of fact, Mr. Holmes,” I said, “I do have a bit of sturdy lacing if you will wait a moment.”

  I unthreaded the cord of my Gypsy corselet, which fell to the ground unnoticed and unmourned.

  “Excellent,” he said, testing the line’s resilience. “Long enough, and strong enough, to keep Mr. Kelly out of mischief for a few hours.”

  He had absolutely no curiosity about where on my person I had found or stored such an item.

  I watched him securely bind Kelly’s arms behind him, then use the man’s own belt to confine his ankles.

  “How did you manage to overpower him in the dark?” I wondered.

  “The dark had nothing to do with it. My advantage was Baritsu, an Oriental martial art that involves many quick and deceptive movements. Perhaps your Mr. Stanhope may know something of it.”

  “Perhaps. Have you any notion where he might be?”

  Sherlock Holmes paused after finishing binding Kelly, then glanced up with a private smile. “In Prague, I imagine, with your friend Mrs. Norton and her shadow Miss Pink. My brother Mycroft has arranged to delay their intrusive rescue attempts.”

  I gasped. “Quentin is with Irene and Pink?”

  “He joined them in Paris, why? You shouldn’t be surprised.”

  I wasn’t surprised, I was something entirely different. Quentin was with Irene. I expected no less. Quentin was with Pink. Quentin was with Pink while I was confined to castle and corselet and braids and lamb stew night and noon with Godfrey in Transylvania.

  It was only after a few more agonized moments of supposition that I realized that Sherlock Holmes had admitted to interfering with my dearest friends’ movements.

  I drew myself up, sans the support of my fallen corselet. “On the one hand, Mr. Holmes, I find it presumptuous and utterly despicable that you would connive against my friends. On the other, I am glad that they have been prevented from risking themselves on our behalf.”

  “Where is Norton, by the way?”

  “I don’t know. He and Bram Stoker went ahead to explore. One or both was to return to the foot of the stairs with a candle when there was something to report.”

  “So you didn’t go waltzing down into Kelly’s clutches out of ignorance.”

  “I never go waltzing anywhere out of ignorance, Mr. Holmes, which you would know did you know me better. Kelly carried a candle, and it was too dark to see who he wasn’t until I was too close to retreat.”

  “Quite,” he agreed.

  “And I would like my smelling salts back.”

  “What?”

  “The sterling silver smelling salts vial that I gave the Gypsy violinist.”

  “Ah.” He pulled something from the pocket of his ridiculous full trousers (that had seemed dashing when I assumed that Quentin wore them) and held it out. “You devised a clever if desperate plan. I imagine the barrister managed the Latin.”

  “My father was a parson in the Church of England,” I rejoined as stiffly as ever.

  “Of course. No Latin. My chemical, medical, and legal experiments have acquainted me with the language, dead as it may be. Cleverly done.”

  “We realized it wouldn’t work when Bram Stoker told us later that the man Tatyana had introduced to us as the ‘Count’ was actually the village priest.”

  “Before we find your missing explorers, tell me who this Bram Stoker is.”

  “You don’t know?”

  “Should I? Please do me the favor, unlike Watson, of not assuming that common knowledge is my knowledge. I am an unabashed specialist and in a very narrow constellation of disciplines, including the telltale shapes of human hands and ears, tattoos and tobaccos, manuscripts and typescripts and other arcane matters. You may often need to explain what you consider obvious to me.”

  “I believe that situation works both ways.”

  He digested that. “True. So who is Bram Stoker? I don’t have my Baker Street commonplace book to consult.”

  “I should think you could read the Gypsy tea leaves,” I commented, but he refused to rise to the bait, and I realized I was being childish at a time when none of us could afford it.

  “Bram Stoker,” I went on, “is theatrical manager for Henry Irving of London, the world’s greatest contemporary actor.”

  “I may have heard of him. Actors are not among my specialities.”

  “That is odd, since you often behave like one yourself. At any rate, Bram is well-known about London. We made his acquaintance years ago. In fact, I poured at one of his wife’s teas, but of course it was in the pursuit of an early private inquiry of Irene’s involving—” I stopped abruptly, aware that I was about to reveal her pursuit of Queen Marie Antoinette’s Zone of Diamonds to the last person on earth who should know about it.

  “More of Mr. Stoker and less of your friend’s escapades, although I am sure that they make for sparkling conversation.” Even by candlelight I could detect a very minor twinkle in his eye that made me wonder if he suspected more about diamonds than either Irene or I dreamed. I plunged ahead.

  “As a theater manager Bram is man-about-town, a raconteur, a lecturer, and a world traveler. In fact, his idea of a holiday is a solitary tramp through the wild places of the world, even though he has a wife and child in London. He also writes a bit, but they are sensational stories.”

  “How did he happen to join the hunting party?”

  “He was in Paris?”

  “During the killings?”

  “Yes, in fact…it’s hardly relevant, because we all know who Jack the Ripper is, but Irene had pointed out once that Bram had also been in London during the Irving production of Macbeth all last year, and that if speculators were proposing respectable figures for the Ripper, who better than a theatrical manager who leaves work late each night and whose whereabouts are unaccounted for? That only goes to show how insane Ripper fever had become; even the royal family was tainted with suspicion.”

  Sherlock Holmes had dropped the lounging Gypsy stance he still affected like a second skin and suddenly stood straight at his six feet of height or more. He towered over me like a schoolmaster.

  “Irrelevant? The very opposite may be true, Miss Huxleigh. The matter of the Ripper is not settled.”

  “But James Kelly…” I pointed to the bound figure still unconscious on the cellar floor.

  “…is a murderer, a madman, and is certainly connected to many of these woman-slayings, but he is not Jack the Ripper. Madam Irene’s suspicions of Bram Stoker are not as unlikely as you think. I have studied the volume of case histories she unearthed in the Left Bank bookstalls of Paris and it is most scientific.”

  My mouth agape, I said nothing. Had I inched along a wall over a chasm tied to Jack the Ripper?

  “As instructive as this Psychopathia Sexualis of Krafft-Ebing’s is, however, and valid, it has little bearing on the true motivations of the one who slaughtered prostitutes in London, Prague, and Paris.”

  “You are deliberately trying to give me a headache, Mr. Holmes, and I will not listen further. Next you will be saying that Godfrey or Quentin could be the Ripper!”

  “Indeed, a case can be made for almost any man, more’s the pity. Quite a comment on the relations between the sexes, isn’t it? Which is no doubt why you and I so wisely refrain from such nonsense.”

  Well!

  “I really require nothing further of you, other than a reunion with the missing Messieurs Norton and Stoker, and that you all stay out of my way when the time comes. I am up against the most vicious gang of my career and well out of my bailiwick. If only Watson and his trusty revolver were here!”

  I could have responded in kind, “If only Irene and her trusty revolver were here,” but that was the last thing on earth that I truly wanted.

  45.

  Trapped Like Rats


  A lovely weapon indeed. The trick is that you must use an air pump to prime it. After that you have twenty shots before it fizzles. For those twenty shots you have one of the most murderous weapons on the planet.

  —QUENTIN STANHOPE ON THE AIR RIFLE

  It was with great pleasure that I assisted Sherlock Holmes in depositing James Kelly for safekeeping in one of the large wooden boxes that littered the vast empty cellars beneath the castle.

  I did not assist much, merely helped lift the man’s bound legs into the box before Mr. Holmes replaced the cover.

  The arrangement was satisfyingly like storing the man in a coffin as I had been when transported from Paris to this mountain keep in Transylvania. I was even pleased with my decision to appropriate Godfrey’s trousers, for I never could have bent and heaved with propriety in ladies’ garb.

  The detective said nothing of my outré garb, nor my aid.

  “That will keep the rest of the villains from stumbling over Kelly for some time,” he concluded, “although I believe that they would be as unhappy to see him as you were.”

  “Really? Why? Is he not part of their cult?”

  “Not a welcome one. Now. I suggest we retreat to the foot of the stairs and wait for the candlebearer you expected, rather than the one you were unfortunate enough to greet.”

  With my candle fresh-lit we retraced our steps back to that unhappy site.

  By now there was a faint hum of activity throughout the cellar, as if a huge, invisible hive of bees had taken up residence. I cannot explain it, a sound both natural and unnatural and rather elemental, like the wind of the sea rushing through many small empty caverns.

  This part of the castle remained, however, eerily deserted and I actually felt a pang for mad James Kelly awakening bound in the utter dark of that vampire box.

  The snakelike shuffle of shoes in the dark brought Sherlock Holmes to attention at the wall he leaned upon. I had sat on a step near the bottom and leaped to my feet.

  The candle flicker that approached bobbled like a miner’s lamp.

 

‹ Prev