Copyright © 2020 by Little Elm Press, LLC
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
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Book cover © 2020 by Killion Publishing.
What They are Saying About “The Adventure of the Murdered Gypsy”
Overall, [Dr.] Sherwood-Fabre’s reimagining of the famous detective ably expands the possibilities of the Holmes canon. A multifaceted and convincing addition to Sherlock-ian lore.
—Kirkus Review
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[Dr.] Sherwood-Fabre’s attention to detail and vivid prose are on full display in this delightful look at the evolution of a young Sherlock Holmes.
—Book Life Prize
A classic in the making!
—Gemma Halliday, New York Times and USA Today Bestselling Author
To my husband, for the support and humor he has shared for more than forty years.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter NIne
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Also by Liese Sherwood-Fabre
Chapter One
Mother pivoted, swung her foot, and hit her opponent squarely on the jaw. The man landed on his back against the wooden floorboards with enough force to send tremors through the soles of my feet.
Mr. Moto raised himself onto one elbow and rubbed the side of his face with his other hand. “Very good.”
Mother extended her hand to our baritsu instructor, but he waved it away. “I’m quite amazed,” she said, “at the freedom of movement these Turkish trousers allow.”
I couldn’t argue with her statement. The blousy coverings permitted full use of her legs—something her skirts had never done. At the same time, I found them rather unsettling. Until she had introduced the garment for our lessons, I had not seen her lower extremities, and certainly not in motion. I also couldn’t help but wonder what our instructor thought of her visible, albeit covered, limbs.
On the other hand, both he and I bared most of our legs. The traditional baritsu costume, or gi, consisted of a loose, long-sleeved white tunic that all but covered a pair of very short pants.
When he rose to his feet, I was struck again by our instructor’s diminutive size. He matched my mother closely in height and weight, but I had learned at our first lesson his stature did not indicate his strength when it came to defending himself.
Of course, my mother was rather tall compared to many women in our village. Slim and dark-haired, I was told repeatedly how much I resembled her.
“Your turn, Master Sherlock.”
By this time, I’d gotten used to his accent and enjoyed how he pronounced my name, roughening the l almost into an r.
I took the traditional opening stance, but before I could bow, Trevor entered, leaving my uncle’s workshop open to the winter air. My seven-year-old cousin stood just inside, almost as if he were afraid to enter. The cold air rushed in, causing goose bumps to break out on my legs.
“I was told to come and get you. Cousin Mycroft is here.”
“How wonderful,” my mother said. “I know he’ll want to freshen up from his trip, so we’ll be there shortly. Sherlock was about to have a go at this new move. If you wish to stay and watch, you may. But please shut the door.”
Once we were no longer exposed to the elements, I bowed to our trainer and prepared to imitate the kick my mother had just executed.
Trevor spoke up behind my back. “But Mother said you were to come directly and bring Uncle Ernest with you because a friend of his has come too.”
I turned my back to Mr. Moto to ask my cousin to repeat the statement. In all my years, I couldn’t recall a single time my quite, private uncle had received a visitor. Before I could voice this observation, my instructor swept his leg behind mine, flipping my feet out from under me and the rest of me toward the floor. The air rushed out of my lungs with a whoosh. I wasn’t sure which hurt more, my back or my pride, when I heard Trevor giggle.
My instructor’s face hovered over mine. “Are you all right, Master Sherlock?”
I nodded and accepted his hand to pull myself up.
Once righted, he pointed a finger at me. “Never turn your back on an opponent.”
My cheeks burned from his reproach. While he might have overplayed his point, he was correct in demonstrating I had given him the advantage. I had no time to note this because Mother spoke again.
“A friend of Ernest’s? That does put a different wrinkle on things.” She tilted her head to one side, as if weighing this new information, and turned to Moto. “I’m afraid, then, we’ll have to cut our lesson short today. Let’s continue tomorrow, shall we?” She glanced at me. “Sherry, dear, please collect your uncle from the barn and join us in the parlor. We’ll see you at dinner, Mr. Moto.”
The man bowed low. “Until then.”
Retrieving my pants from a nearby workbench, I pulled them on over my gi.
When I turned to go, Trevor asked, “Might I go with you?”
I hesitated in my response, seeking a socially acceptable excuse to avoid including him. To be honest, I found the boy annoying. I was, after all, six—about to be seven—years his senior, yet he insisted on following me everywhere. Since he’d arrived two days ago, whenever I turned around, I found him staring at me with wide eyes and a slight smile on his face.
Mother solved my quandary, although not in the fashion I’d hoped. “An excellent idea. Trevor’s been asking to see the horses. This will give him an opportunity to do so.”
With a sigh, I bowed once again to Moto and moved to the door, where I jammed my feet into my boots and wrapped a scarf about my neck. “Come on, then I need to change before dinner.”
The boy’s delight was obvious. He bounced next to me and kept up a running commentary as we made our way to the stables. He noted how cold it was, how we could see our breath, and didn’t he resemble a dragon when he blew out through his nostrils, and how quiet it was here in the country. I considered pointing out the last was difficult to note with his persistent jabbering, but instead, let my mind wander, providing various grunts and other noncommittal noises while he nattered on. My ill humor was only partly related to his constant tagging along. Another portion reflected the humiliation I’d just experienced at the hands, or rather the feet, of Mr. Moto.
The majority, however, involved Mycroft’s arrival. While he’d been away at university, I’d been able to relax in a way I found difficult when he was at home. His criticisms of my violin practicing; constant corrections to my French, German, and Latin pronunciations; and complaints about any noise I made that disturbed his thinking always kept me on guard. With his return, I would have to, once again, increase my caution. Not that I didn’t like my brother. We had certainly developed a greater appreciation for each other when our family had solved a murder and freed my mother from gaol a bare three months ago. He simply wasn’t the easiest person to get a
long with.
As we neared the barn, I stopped and turned to Trevor. “Can you repeat what you just said?”
“I said the woman visitor was very pretty.”
Thankfully, I was no longer in the middle of a baritsu lesson because Moto would have kicked me onto my back for a second time as I stared dumbfounded at my cousin. Uncle Ernest’s friend a woman? And pretty? I didn’t recall Ernest ever mentioning a woman, other than once, and she had been the daughter of an Indian royal.
“Is she an Englishwoman?”
When he nodded, I quickened my pace. I had to get my uncle back to the house to see his female friend for myself.
Our footfalls echoed in the cavernous barn. Built for a much larger number of horses than we presently kept, many of its stalls were empty, but the current occupants responded to our calls with a chorus of whinnies and stamping in the darkness. Their pungent animal odor, mixed with that of hay and leather, grew stronger, and Trevor edged closer to me as we continued toward a lantern glowing near the structure’s black center. When my uncle popped up from behind one stall door to the side of the light, Trevor gave a little yelp.
I chuckled at his fright. What would his reaction be when he found out what my uncle was doing in there?
Ernest’s resemblance to my mother was striking. She once had told me it was the nose, which I had inherited as well. My experience had taught me the French were thinner and their faces more angular than the British. Our connection to the Vernet family was quite evident in all three of us. And of course, the graying moustache gave my uncle a distinguished look in spite of his often-distracted manner.
“Boys, so glad you’re here,” he said. “Come. I could use some help.”
Trevor ran to the stall but stopped at its entrance. “Where’s the horse?”
“No horse,” Ernest said and held up a rectangular metal box. “Mice.”
My cousin’s eyes rounded as scratching and scurrying from inside the box indicated it held several live ones. “What are you doing with those?”
“Uncle Ernest uses them in his work,” I said.
From Trevor’s stare, I wasn’t sure if he was curious or fearful of the contents, but I didn’t have the patience to explain it to him at the time. More pressing matters had brought us here.
“We came to get you,” I said. “You’re to come to the house—”
“You have a visitor,” Trevor said, breaking in. “Two, actually.”
I turned to him. Two?
“A lady and a gentleman. Mother said you were to come at once.”
“I have some things to finish up here,” he said, glancing about the stall. “But I guess the mice will keep until I can come back to collect them. Let’s set up the traps and then go back to the house.”
He handed me another metal box and pointed to an empty stall midway between the center and the far door. “Put it in that one.”
“I’ve never seen a mouse trap like that,” my cousin said.
“It’s my own invention.” A broad smile split his face. “To capture them alive, you have to attract them but not harm them. The key is the entrance.”
I turned the box for Trevor to see the hole.
“Put your hand in.” When he hesitated, I added, “Don’t worry. It’s empty.”
After another studied pause, he pushed his hand inside. A wire cone connected to the hole’s entrance led inside the box. As a mouse (or in this case, my cousin’s hand) slipped into the box, the cone closed in on itself, trapping the mouse inside. In Trevor’s case, the wire constricted about his wrist. Upon realizing he was snared, Trevor tried to pull out his hand, but it held him fast.
“I’m stuck.” Panic tinged his voice. “Get me out.”
My uncle stepped up and patted the boy on his back. “Don’t worry. It’s actually based on a toy. A tube made out of straw. It’s woven in such a fashion that when you put your fingers in each end of the tube and pull, it tightens just like the wire cone. But one has merely to push the contraption in the opposite direction…” He placed a finger inside the cone next to the boy’s wrist and pushed it upward and toward the box’s center. It widened enough for Trevor to extract his hand with a sigh of relief. “To be free of the contraption.”
I checked his wrist. The wire had left slight imprints on the skin, but he was otherwise unmarked. “No harm done.”
“It wasn’t a very nice trick,” he said, his lower lip pouting out.
Before I could respond, Ernest snickered. “How do you think he knew what would happen? I caught him the same way.”
“Truly?”
Trevor glanced at me, and I dropped my gaze, too embarrassed for the second time within an hour to answer.
Ernest must have recognized my discomfort because he tugged on his overcoat’s lapels and brushed off the larger bits of hay and changed the subject. “Let’s leave the traps and return to the house. I shouldn’t keep my visitors waiting. A man and a woman? I have no idea who.”
My uncle’s strides were too long for Trevor’s much shorter legs. When we had gone no more than a quarter of the way to the house, the boy was a number of paces behind us. He called out, and my uncle instructed me to wait for him. By the time Trevor caught up to me, Ernest was far ahead of us.
“What does Uncle want with the mice?” he asked as we continued across the yard.
“To experiment with. We’re cataloging the effects of various poisons.”
“Are you trying to find the best one?”
“No. Although that might be a possible result. Imagine you were to find a dead—er, animal…”
I paused before completing the explanation, weighing my words. Aunt Iris probably wouldn’t want me to talk about poisons killing animals, and certainly not people, the true explanation for the experiments. My father’s younger sister had had trouble having children, and she doted on her only child almost to the point of suffocation. She kept him in a shift long after most boys no longer wore infant clothes. And she refused to cut his hair. If it hadn’t been so curly, it would have reached farther than his shoulders. That she had allowed him to come to the workshop to get us was out of the ordinary. She rarely allowed him to be outside for fear of his catching a chill. Which meant her curiosity about Mycroft’s companions outweighed any concerns she had regarding her son crossing the fifty yards between the house and the workshop.
In the end, I chose a rather mundane explanation for my uncle’s work. “If you found a dead animal like a cow or sheep, you might want to know what it had eaten so you could protect others from eating the same thing. Noting whether they foamed at the mouth or stopped breathing because their throat constricted could tell you something.”
“I had a puppy. Papa said it ate something that made it sick, and it died. Maybe if you’d been there, you could’ve saved it.”
“Right now, we’re still learning what the different poisons might be. But in the future, I suppose so.”
“Papa bought me another puppy. His name is Speckles, ’cause he has spots on his back…”
This new monologue continued all the way to the house and wandered from puppies to horses to the train ride from London to speculating what we would be having for dinner. Never had I been more grateful for arriving at the house than when we stepped inside and were directly met by his mother.
Unfortunately for Aunt Iris, she took after the same side of the Holmes family as my father—stocky with a wide girth. At least she hadn’t inherited his baldness. At the moment, she had pulled her dark hair away from her face, allowing the curls to descend down her back. All the same, the scowl she now gave me resembled my father’s.
“There you are,” Aunt Iris said, folding her arms across her ample bosom. “I was going to send someone out to look for you.”
“Uncle Ernest wasn’t in his workshop. He was in the barn. Did you know he’s catching mice to poison them? I got my hand caught in a trap, but it didn’t hurt. See?”
“Truly, Sherlock, I would hope you would keep a b
etter watch over your younger cousin. What if he had injured himself in the trap or been bitten by mice? Heaven only knows what dreadful fever he could catch. And it would have been your fault.” Her gaze traveled from my head to my boots while I removed my jacket, and she gave a harsh sniff. “What sort of shirt is that you have on?”
“My baritsu costume.”
“I suppose you don’t have time to change. Come along and meet your uncle’s guests.”
After hanging up my jacket on a peg and kicking off my boots, I followed a few paces behind her. Despite the distance, I could clearly catch her mutterings. “Violette in that indecent outfit of hers. The boy in pajamas. I don’t know how we can keep the Holmes name from scandal with such goings-on.”
Only Father’s etiquette lessons and my recognition that her visit should be over shortly after the holidays kept me from responding to her complaints. If she understood what circumstances had driven my mother to decide she needed to be able to defend herself, she might have had more sympathy. One had only to confront a killer once to determine some training in self-defense was essential.
When we entered the parlor, my father, uncle, and a stranger I assumed to be one of our visitors rose to greet my aunt. I observed Mycroft was absent and assumed he had gone to his room to change for dinner. I shouldn’t have been shocked or disappointed he hadn’t waited for me to arrive. He would have placed a higher priority on dressing for dinner than greeting me.
Ernest gestured for me to step farther into the room.
“Come here. I want you to meet one of my oldest friends from—”
“India,” I said, extending my hand to the lean, short gentleman with graying hair and beard standing quite erect by my uncle’s side.
The Adventure of the Murdered Gypsy Page 1