by Bill Peschel
“Oh, use your bean, Doc, use your bean!” cried Holmes. “Is that all you can detect?”
“Well, that’s all there is to detect without your magnifying glass and microscope there,” I replied.
“Honestly, Watson, I think you’re getting dumber and dumber every day! Think, man, think! Where in this immediate vicinity did you see red clay like that before?” said Holmes. I scratched my head with perplexity, and after a moment it came to me:
“Oh, yes; out behind the stables, near where the horses’ stalls are. I remember now having seen the clay there when we were out after Billie Budd yesterday afternoon.”
“Well, that shows that Eustace Thorneycroft, the owner of the shoe, was out behind the stable some time recently,” said Holmes; “a rather incongruous place for a private secretary, and one of such sedentary and scholarly appearance too. Putting two and two together, it is not a very violent assumption to say that Eustace went out to the stables for a very special purpose, and what more special purpose could he have than to hide the diamond cuff-buttons, or at least some of them, which he probably stole! Comprends-tu cela, tu imbécile?” Then my partner added: “Of course, I couldn’t exactly swear to it yet that Eustace is the guilty gink we are after, but I’m going to disguise myself as a race-track follower and go out and talk ‘horses’ to the two coachmen, Yensen and Linescu, and we’ll probably learn some more. I’ve found a good many other clues on the other shoes, which I will not divulge into your capacious ears until later. Suffice it to say, however, that the reason I made you people walk out on the wet grass yesterday was not because I own stock in a cough-and-cold medicine company, as you might think, but because I wanted whatever telltale stains there might be on the six pairs of shoes (indicating to my trained eye where their owner had been recently) to become moistened and to stick more firmly to the shoes, so they wouldn’t dry up and get knocked off before I could grab the shoes and inspect them. You see, Watson, there are more ways of killing a cat than by choking it to death with butter!”
As the sarcastic old cuss continued his lecture, he shoved all the twelve shoes he had examined into the lower drawer of the dresser in the room, locking it and putting the key in his pocket.
“I guess breakfast must be about ready now,” said Holmes, as he glanced at his watch; “it’s twenty minutes after seven. If there’s any of that whiskey left that we found on the shelf in the lavatory yesterday morning, I’m going to help myself to some more of it. I feel kind of chilly after sitting up for an hour inspecting the shoes.”
We washed, after Holmes had taken the chill-remedy, and were passing down the front stairway to the lower hall on our way to the dining-room when I suddenly thought of the consequences of our nocturnal escapade.
“Say, Holmes,” I whispered anxiously, “what’ll we do when all these people report the loss of their footgear to the Earl?”
“What’ll we do, you chump? Why, sit tight and say nothing, of course. Just leave it to your revered Uncle Dudley to deal with the situation. I’ll handle ’em, all right; and if you forget yourself so far as to blab out where the shoes are, by Gosh, I’ll decapitate you! Now, remember!”
And Holmes squeezed my arm warningly.
Nobody else was in the dining-room yet, but just as we entered, the rotund figure of Egbert Bunbury obtruded itself upon the otherwise pleasant scene, and Egbert stammered:
“Oh, er—ah, Mister ’Olmes, Hi was just going hupstairs to call you.”
“Oh, you were, were you, Eggie,” said Holmes cuttingly. “Well, I found my way down here, and Doctor Watson also, without your kind assistance. If I were you, I’d have him prescribe for you, as I’m afraid you’re walking in your sleep!”
In a moment His Lordship and the others—including the Countess this time—came in, and we all sat down to breakfast. As Harrigan was pouring out a cup of coffee for Thorneycroft, the latter said to the Earl: “Do you know that to-day is the tenth of the month—Wednesday, April the tenth?”
“Well, what of it, Eustace? Ich kebibble about the date, just so Mr. Holmes here recovers my diamond cuff-buttons for me,” replied the Earl, as he smiled at my partner.
“Why, on the tenth of each month you have to send a check for ten pounds to the treasurer of the Society for the Amelioration of Indigent Pearl-Divers of the Andaman Islands, in London, according to the promise you signed last fall,” said Eustace.
“Do I?” said the Earl, stirring his oatmeal. “Well, I fell for it in the fall all right—haw! haw!”
Everybody laughed, as in duty bound when the boss cracks a joke, no matter how punk it is; and then Holmes put his oar in.
“I say, Thorneycroft, is the pearl-diving business out there in the Andamans as good as the diamond-swiping industry in this country?”
Chapter X
Thorneycroft, greatly embarrassed at the brutal insinuation of Holmes, colored deeply, and didn’t seem to know what to say for a moment.
“Why, how should I know? If you’ve got the goods on anybody, as the quaint American expression has it, go ahead and arrest them,” he finally stammered.
“What peculiar things you do say, Mr. Holmes,” said the Countess, leaning forward with interest, as she looked meaningly at Lord Launcelot. “I wonder if your remarkable talents will discover who made away with my best pair of shoes last night. I missed them the first thing this morning, as they were the ones I wore Easter Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, and I wanted to wear them again to-day.”
“Why, my shoes are gone, too! I thought at first I had mislaid them in my room, but a thief must have been in the castle!” chorused everybody at once, while I heard Holmes quietly chuckle in his throat. “If a certain person in high social standing,” continued the Countess, “thinks that such outrages, first the theft of the Earl’s diamond cuff-buttons and then the theft of our shoes, are to be lightly condoned because of his close relationship to the Earl, then he is greatly mistaken!”
And she again looked daggers at Lord Launcelot.
“Oh, come, come, Your Ladyship,” protested Holmes with a smile, “you mustn’t be too hard on your brother-in-law. I don’t think he took the shoes last night. In fact, I am quite sure of it. I’ll guarantee to get your shoes back for you before noon to-day, and you can gamble on that!”
“Why, of course,” interposed Launcelot hastily. “Billie Budd must have come back in the middle of the night, and stolen the shoes, after he escaped yesterday afternoon. I guess he’s probably hiding around in the neighborhood somewhere.”
I was just opening my mouth to get off a witticism about who took the shoes, when Holmes, observing me, gave me a warning kick under the table, so I desisted.
After breakfast was over—at which meal Inspector Letstrayed ate at least three times as much as any one else—Holmes announced he was going down to Hedge-gutheridge to investigate some clues, and would not be back until noon. He signaled to me to accompany him, and when nobody was looking, we hurriedly beat it upstairs to our room, where Holmes quickly took out a disguise from the suit-case, took off his regular clothes, and put on the new outfit, which consisted of a well-worn and dirty suit of loud yellow checks, with a dinky little red cap, broken tan shoes, and a riding-whip to carry in his hand. Then he deftly got out his make-up stuff, and in a moment had fixed a lump of flesh-colored wax on the bridge of his long aquiline nose, and painted his face red with actors’ grease-paint until he looked as if he had been drunk for a week. Changing his voice, he addressed me in a thick Cockney dialect:
“My name is now Dick Henderson, from the Epsom race-track, and don’t you forget it, old Sawbones, or I’ll make hash out of you!”
“All right, Dick, I’m on, as usual. Say, now’s a good chance to put back those six pairs of shoes in their respective owners’ rooms before Natalie and Adelaide, the chambermaids, get up here,” I said.
“Good for you, Doc! You betray a gleam of intellect at last. We’ll replace the stolen brogans at once,” congratulated Holmes.
&nbs
p; We, thereupon, went around to the six rooms and restored the shoes, without encountering anybody who might ask embarrassing questions.
Holmes—in his elegant disguise—and I now descended the stairs and quickly slid out of the front door. It was now a quarter after eight. Making his way around the castle, keeping close to the walls, so as not to be seen from the high windows by any one inside, Holmes led me out to the stables.
Here I hid myself in one of the horses’ stalls, and Holmes walked into another one, where he found fat little Olaf Yensen, the first coachman, currying one of the noble steeds.
“Hello, there, What’s-your-name,” Holmes called out, addressing Olaf. “My name is Dick Henderson. I just came around to ask you what you know about some of the Earl of Puddingham’s eight fine horses here being entered in the coming races at Epsom. If you can give me any information about the horses, so I can bet on them with a good chance to win, why I’ll make it worth your while, you know.”
And he winked at the coachman, who stood open-mouthed in admiration of the false Dick Henderson’s noisy clothes.
“You bane a pretty sporty feller, Mister Henderson, but Ay really haven’t heard that das Earl is going to have any of dese horses run in das races,” replied Olaf, as he scratched his round little head; “but Ay tink if he does, this horse here will run, because he is das best in das Puddingham stables. Yust look at vat a elegant pair of legs he has—er, I mean two pair of legs! Oh, my! he can run like das vind, Ay bet you!”
“Well, that’s good. What’s this wonderful horse’s name?” said Holmes, as he took out a notebook and pencil.
“His name bane Ajax II, und Ay take care of him myself. My assistant, Carol Linescu, bane no good, und Ay vouldn’t trust him. He bane asleep up in the hayloft now. My name bane Olaf Yensen.”
And the coachman went ahead currying the sleek-looking Ajax II, who whinnied with pleasure as the currycomb slid over his glossy brown coat.
“All right, Olaf. Much obliged to you. Here, have a drink of this,” said Holmes, with a grin, as he took from his hip-pocket a small bottle of whiskey, which he had thoughtfully provided for just such occasions as this, and offered it to Olaf.
“Thanks, Mr. Henderson. Gesundheit!” returned Olaf, taking a swig of the stuff.
“I heard down at the village this morning,” Holmes continued, “as I came through, that the Earl had eleven very valuable diamond cuff-buttons stolen, and that the celebrated detective from London, Mr. Hemlock Holmes, is here now investigating the case. I wonder who swiped the shiners, anyhow.”
“Oh, my! Oh, my!” and Olaf nearly choked on the whiskey as he spluttered in reply. “Ay know vere one of das cuff-buttons is, all right! Und Ay bet you das long-legged old fake Hemlock Holmes never finds it, either! He is a big bluffer. He doesn’t do a single thing but stand around und talk sassy to us fellers at the castle, und since das Earl is half-stewed all the time, drinking das expensive vine mit Harrigan das butler, old Holmes, he finds it darned easy to pull das vool over das Earl’s eyes, und make him believe he is earning das big fee he vill charge him! Ha, ha! He may snoop around here all he likes, but he’ll never find das cuff-button, because Ay have got it hid in a goot hiding-place! Mr. Billie Budd, das gentleman from Australia, he took one pair of das cuff-buttons, und he gave one of dem to me to hide for him, until das excitement blows over, und den I give it back to him, und he pays me a big reward for it, und he takes it in to London and sells it for many tousand moneys. He escaped yesterday afternoon when das big walrus of a police inspector from London tried to arrest him; und he’s not far away, Ay bet you.”
Holmes had very good control of his facial muscles, and didn’t crack a smile while the unsuspecting Olaf dribbled out the whole thing to him, but I, hidden in the next stall, had a hard time suppressing a laugh when I heard Holmes criticized to his face after that fashion.
“Well, that’s very interesting, Olaf, I’m sure,” said Holmes ingratiatingly. “Would you mind telling me just where this diamond cuff-button is hidden, now?”
Olaf put his tongue in his cheek, and winking at the false race-track follower, replied:
“Vat you want to know for? Ay bane taking no chances mit it, so Mr. Budd, ven he comes back, vill get it safe, und pay me das big reward he promised me.”
“Oh, well; you don’t need to tell if you don’t want to,” replied Holmes carelessly. “By the way, hasn’t this great racer here got something the matter with his left hind hoof? There seems to be a lump just above it.”
And Holmes pointed to Ajax’s hoof, which his quick and discerning eyes had noticed while Olaf was making his long speech. The shot must have struck home, for Olaf showed great emotion at once.
“Oh, no, nuttings at all, nuttings at all!” he cried nervously, his hands working convulsively and his face very red. “Das horse he vas born dat way! Dat’s all!”
“He was, eh? It looks kind of funny to me, though,” was Holmes’s quick reply. “I know something about veterinary surgery, and maybe I can fix it up for you. Here, h’ist up there, Ajax!”
And before Olaf could prevent him Holmes had grabbed the horse’s leg up between his own knees, whipped out his pocket-knife, and scraped away at the strange lump between the pastern and the hoof. He found it to be a lump of mud, which rolled out on the straw-littered floor of the stall, broke into pieces, and then disclosed to our wondering eyes one of the mysteriously stolen diamond cuff-buttons!
“Great Caesar’s ghost!” yelled Holmes at the top of his voice; “here’s one of them, anyhow!”
And he grabbed up the glittering jewel from the floor, and confronted the astounded and frightened Yensen.
“So the horse was born with a diamond on his hoof, eh? That beats a baby’s being born with a golden spoon in its mouth, as they say some of them are. But hold on a minute, O faithful confidant of the Australian crook. My name isn’t really Dick Henderson. It’s,” and Holmes suddenly jerked off the false lump on his nose and resumed his natural tone of voice, “Hemlock Holmes, at your service! Now you, march!”
As he uttered these words, Holmes pulled out his revolver, covered the shrinking coachman, and motioned him toward the castle.
I now came out of my hiding-place in the next stall, and accompanied the strange procession into the castle: Yensen, holding his hands up, his face almost green with fright, in front; Holmes, with his drawn revolver pointed at him, immediately behind, and yours truly bringing up the rear, while the bulldog barked loudly at us from his kennel next to the stalls. As we marched along the garden-paths, Holmes demanded of his victim:
“Say, wasn’t Thorneycroft out here at the stable to see you along with Billie Budd, Olaf?”
“Yes, he was, Mr. Holmes,” answered the cowering Olaf.
“And they both made it up with you to hide the cuff-button, eh? Now tell me how you came to put it in such an outlandish place! Talk quick, now!” said Holmes.
“Ay had it hidden up in the hay-loft first, und Ay yust vas taking it out to admire it vile Ay curried das horse, ven Ay heard you coming along, und Ay got scared, und put some mud over it und shoved it under das horse’s pastern as das nearest place Ay could tink of! Please don’t hurt me now, Mr. Holmes. Ay never sviped anyt’ing before!” pleaded Olaf, as he cringed along toward the castle, every other moment looking around nervously behind him at Holmes’s revolver.
“Except that you tried to steal Linescu’s boots, according to his testimony,” returned Holmes dryly just as we entered the rear door of the castle, and proceeded along the corridor toward the library. “But don’t be afraid. We’ll talk about the proper retribution for your crime after all the rest of the cuff-buttons are found. Do you know anything about them?”
“Not a thing, Mr. Holmes—not a t’ing. The only one Ay saw is das one you captured now,” replied Olaf.
Holmes marched his captive into the library, where the Earl and Thorneycroft, who had been sitting down at the table going over some bills and other papers, jumped up in
surprise at the sight of us; while Holmes informed them of his identity beneath the race-track disguise. Thorneycroft turned pale when he saw his recent accomplice, Olaf Yensen, in the hands of the avenging detective, and he had to grab the edge of the table to steady himself.
“Your Lordship, here is the first one of the diamond cuff-buttons recovered for you, with my compliments,” said Holmes triumphantly, laying the gem on the table before the astonished Earl. “Your coachman is not really the thief—only a receiver of stolen goods. Thorneycroft,” he added, as he turned to the latter, “the game is up! I’m onto you! You stole the cuff-button and gave it to Olaf to hide for you, and William X. Budd knows where the rest are, and you probably do, too. Now make a clean breast of it, and avoid further trouble.”
My partner seated himself in one of the leather easy-chairs, lit a cigarette, crossed his legs comfortably, and listened while the confused and guilty secretary tried to find his voice. The Earl sat down hard in another chair and listened with all his ears.
Chapter XI
“Er, er—oh, this is terrible! Billie Budd stole ’em, not me. He came into my room early Monday morning, while I was dressing, and showed me the pair of cuff-buttons he said he had stolen during Sunday night, and gave me one to keep for him until he had a good chance to dispose of it. Then, right after I returned from calling on you to inform you of their loss, which was about half-past ten, he and I went out to the stables and he gave the other one to Olaf here to hide for him. Here’s the one I have been keeping, Mr. Holmes,” stammered Thorneycroft, as he took the second sparkling cuff-button out of his vest-pocket and laid it on the table beside the one recovered from Olaf. “When the village constables came up here to search us, I simply slipped the thing into the upper edge of my shoe until they had gone, and I’ve been carrying it here in my vest-pocket ever since.”