THE ADVENTURE OF THE SIX NAPOLEONS
It was no very unusual thing for Mr.
Lestrade, of Scotland Yard, to look in upon us of an evening, and
his visits were welcome to Sherlock Holmes, for they enabled him to
keep in touch with all that was going on at the police
headquarters. In return for the news which Lestrade would bring,
Holmes was always ready to listen with attention to the details of
any case upon which the detective was engaged, and was able
occasionally, without any active interference, to give some hint or
suggestion drawn from his own vast knowledge and experience.
On this particular evening, Lestrade had spoken of
the weather and the newspapers. Then he had fallen silent, puffing
thoughtfully at his cigar. Holmes looked keenly at him.
“Anything remarkable on hand?” he asked.
“Oh, no, Mr. Holmes—nothing very particular.”
“Then tell me about it.”
Lestrade laughed.
“Well, Mr. Holmes, there is no use denying that
there is something on my mind. And yet it is such an absurd
business, that I hesitated to bother you about it. On the other
hand, although it is trivial, it is undoubtedly queer, and I know
that you have a taste for all that is out of the common. But, in my
opinion, it comes more in Dr. Watson’s line than ours.”
“Disease?” said I.
“Madness, anyhow. And a queer madness, too. You
wouldn’t think there was anyone living at this time of day who had
such a hatred of Napoleon the First that he would break any image
of him that he could see.”
Holmes sank back in his chair.
“That’s no business of mine,” said he.
“Exactly. That’s what I said. But then, when the
man commits burglary in order to break images which are not his
own, that brings it away from the doctor and on to the
policeman.”
Holmes sat up again.
“Burglary! This is more interesting. Let me hear
the details.”
Lestrade took out his official notebook and
refreshed his memory from its pages.
“The first case reported was four days ago,” said
he. “It was at the shop of Morse Hudson, who has a place for the
sale of pictures and statues in the Kennington Road. The assistant
had left the front shop for an instant, when he heard a crash, and
hurrying in he found a plaster bust of Napoleon, which stood with
several other works of art upon the counter, lying shivered into
fragments. He rushed out into the road, but, although several
passers-by declared that they had noticed a man run out of the
shop, he could neither see anyone nor could he find any means of
identifying the rascal. It seemed to be one of those senseless acts
of Hooliganism which occur from time to time, and it was reported
to the constable on the beat as such. The plaster cast was not
worth more than a few shillings, and the whole affair appeared to
be too childish for any particular investigation.
“The second case, however, was more serious, and
also more singular. It occurred only last night.
“In Kennington Road, and within a few hundred yards
of Morse Hudson’s shop, there lives a well-known medical
practitioner, named Dr. Barnicot, who has one of the largest
practices upon the south side of the Thames. His residence and
principal consulting-room is at Kennington Road, but he has a
branch surgery and dispensary at Lower Brixton Road, two miles
away. This Dr. Barnicot is an enthusiastic admirer of Napoleon, and
his house is full of books, pictures, and relics of the French
Emperor. Some little time ago he purchased from Morse Hudson two
duplicate plaster casts of the famous head of Napoleon by the
French sculptor, Devine. One of these he placed in his hall in the
house at Kennington Road, and the other on the mantelpiece of the
surgery at Lower Brixton. Well, when Dr. Barnicot came down this
morning he was astonished to find that his house had been burgled
during the night, but that nothing had been taken save the plaster
head from the hall. It had been carried out and had been dashed
savagely against the garden wall, under which its splintered
fragments were discovered.”
Holmes rubbed his hands.
“This is certainly very novel,” said he.
“I thought it would please you. But I have not got
to the end yet. Dr. Barnicot was due at his surgery at twelve
o‘clock, and you can imagine his amazement when, on arriving there,
he found that the window had been opened in the night, and that the
broken pieces of his second bust were strewn all over the room. It
had been smashed to atoms where it stood. In neither case were
there any signs which could give us a clue as to the criminal or
lunatic who had done the mischief. Now, Mr. Holmes, you have got
the facts.”
“They are singular, not to say grotesque,” said
Holmes. “May I ask whether the two busts smashed in Dr. Barnicot’s
rooms were the exact duplicates of the one which was destroyed in
Morse Hudson’s shop?”
“They were taken from the same mould.”
“Such a fact must tell against the theory that the
man who breaks them is influenced by any general hatred of
Napoleon. Considering how many hundreds of statues of the great
Emperor must exist in London, it is too much to suppose such a
coincidence as that a promiscuous iconoclast should chance to begin
upon three specimens of the same bust.”
“Well, I thought as you do,” said Lestrade. “On the
other hand, this Morse Hudson is the purveyor of busts in that part
of London, and these three were the only ones which had been in his
shop for years. So, although, as you say, there are many hundreds
of statues in London, it is very probable that these three were the
only ones in that district. Therefore, a local fanatic would begin
with them. What do you think, Dr. Watson?”
“There are no limits to the possibilities of
monomania,” I answered. “There is the condition which the modern
French psychologists have called the ‘idée fixe,’ which may
be trifling in character, and accompanied by complete sanity in
every other way. A man who had read deeply about Napoleon, or who
had possibly received some hereditary family injury through the
great war, might conceivably form such an idée fixe and
under its influence be capable of any fantastic outrage.”
“That won’t do, my dear Watson,” said Holmes,
shaking his head, “for no amount of idée fixe would enable
your interesting monomaniac to find out where these busts were
situated.”
“Well, how do you explain it?”
“I don’t attempt to do so. I would only observe
that there is a certain method in the gentleman’s eccentric
proceedings. For example, in Dr. Barnicot’s hall, where a sound
might arouse the family, the bust was taken outside before being
broken, whereas in the surgery, where there was less danger of an
alarm, it was smashed where it stood. The affair seems absurdly
trifling, and yet I dare call nothing trivial when I reflect that
some of my most classic cases have had the least promising
commencement. You will remember, Watson, how the dreadful business
of the Abernetty family was first brought to my notice by the depth
which the parsley had sunk into the butter upon a hot day. I can’t
afford, therefore, to smile at your three broken busts, Lestrade,
and I shall be very much obliged to you if you will let me hear of
any fresh development of so singular a chain of events.”
The development for which my friend had asked came
in a quicker and an infinitely more tragic form than he could have
imagined. I was still dressing in my bedroom next morning, when
there was a tap at the door and Holmes entered, a telegram in his
hand. He read it aloud:
“Come instantly, 131 Pitt Street,
Kensington.
”LESTRADE.“
“What is it, then?” I asked.
“Don’t know—may be anything. But I suspect it is
the sequel of the story of the statues. In that case our friend the
image-breaker has begun operations in another quarter of London.
There’s coffee on the table, Watson, and I have a cab at the
door.”
In half an hour we had reached Pitt Street, a quiet
little backwater just beside one of the briskest currents of London
life. No. 131 was one of a row, all flat-chested, respectable, and
most unromantic dwellings. As we drove up, we found the railings in
front of the house lined by a curious crowd. Holmes whistled.
“By George! it’s attempted murder at the least.
Nothing less will hold the London message-boy. There’s a deed of
violence indicated in that fel low’s round shoulders and
outstretched neck. What’s this, Watson? The top steps swilled down
and the other ones dry. Footsteps enough, anyhow! Well, well,
there’s Lestrade at the front window, and we shall soon know all
about it.”
The official received us with a very grave face and
showed us into a sitting-room, where an exceedingly unkempt and
agitated elderly man, clad in a flannel dressing-gown, was pacing
up and down. He was introduced to us as the owner of the house—Mr.
Horace Harker, of the Central Press Syndicate.
“It’s the Napoleon bust business again,” said
Lestrade. “You seemed interested last night, Mr. Holmes, so I
thought perhaps you would be glad to be present now that the affair
has taken a very much graver turn.”
“What has it turned to, then?”
“To murder. Mr. Harker, will you tell these
gentlemen exactly what has occurred?”
The man in the dressing-gown turned upon us with a
most melancholy face.
“It’s an extraordinary thing,” said he, “that all
my life I have been collecting other people’s news, and now that a
real piece of news has come my own way I am so confused and
bothered that I can’t put two words together. If I had come in here
as a journalist, I should have interviewed myself and had two
columns in every evening paper. As it is, I am giving away valuable
copy by telling my story over and over to a string of different
people, and I can make no use of it myself. However, I’ve heard
your name, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, and if you’ll only explain this
queer business, I shall be paid for my trouble in telling you the
story.”
Holmes sat down and listened.
“It all seems to centre round that bust of Napoleon
which I bought for this very room about four months ago. I picked
it up cheap from Harding Brothers, two doors from the High Street
Station. A great deal of my journalistic work is done at night, and
I often write until the early morning. So it was to-day. I was
sitting in my den, which is at the back of the top of the house,
about three o‘clock, when I was convinced that I heard some sounds
downstairs. I listened, but they were not repeated, and I concluded
that they came from outside. Then suddenly, about five minutes
later, there came a most horrible yell—the most dreadful sound, Mr.
Holmes, that ever I heard. It will ring in my ears as long as I
live. I sat frozen with horror for a minute or two. Then I seized
the poker and went downstairs. When I entered this room I found the
window wide open, and I at once observed that the bust was gone
from the mantelpiece. Why any burglar should take such a thing
passes my understanding, for it was only a plaster cast and of no
real value whatever.
“You can see for yourself that anyone going out
through that open window could reach the front doorstep by taking a
long stride. This was clearly what the burglar had done, so I went
round and opened the door. Stepping out into the dark, I nearly
fell over a dead man, who was lying there. I ran back for a light,
and there was the poor fellow, a great gash in his throat and the
whole place swimming in blood. He lay on his back, his knees drawn
up, and his mouth horribly open. I shall see him in my dreams. I
had just time to blow on my police-whistle, and then I must have
fainted, for I knew nothing more until I found the policeman
standing over me in the hall.”
“Well, who was the murdered man?” asked
Holmes.
“There’s nothing to show who he was,” said
Lestrade. “You shall see the body at the mortuary, but we have made
nothing of it up to now. He is a tall man, sunburned, very
powerful, not more than thirty. He is poorly dressed, and yet does
not appear to be a labourer. A horn-handled clasp knife was lying
in a pool of blood beside him. Whether it was the weapon which did
the deed, or whether it belonged to the dead man, I do not know.
There was no name on his clothing, and nothing in his pockets save
an apple, some string, a shilling map of London, and a photograph.
Here it is.”
It was evidently taken by a snapshot from a small
camera. It represented an alert, sharp-featured simian man, with
thick eyebrows and a very peculiar projection of the lower part of
the face, like the muzzle of a baboon.
“And what became of the bust?” asked Holmes, after
a careful study of this picture.
“We had news of it just before you came. It has
been found in the front garden of an empty house in Campden House
Road. It was broken into fragments. I am going round now to see it.
Will you come?”
“Certainly. I must just take one look round.” He
examined the carpet and the window. “The fellow had either very
long legs or was a most active man,” said he. “With an area
beneath, it was no mean feat to reach that window-ledge and open
that window. Getting back was comparatively simple. Are you coming
with us to see the remains of your bust, Mr. Harker?”
The disconsolate journalist had seated himself at a
writing-table.
“I must try and make something of it,” said he,
“though I have no doubt that the first editions of ther evening
papers are out already with full details. It’s like my luck! You
remember when the stand fell at Don-caster? Well, I was the only
journalist in the stand, and my journal the only one that had no
account of it, for I was too shaken to write it. And now I’ll be
too late with a murder done on my own doorstep.”
As we left the room, we heard his pen travelling
shrilly over the foolscap.
The spot where the fragments of the bust had been
found was only a few hundred yards away. For the first time our
eyes rested upon this pre sentment of the great emperor, which
seemed to raise such frantic and destructive hatred in the mind of
the unknown. It lay scattered, in splintered shards, upon the
grass. Holmes picked up several of them and examined them
carefully. I was convinced, from his intent face and his purposeful
manner, that at last he was upon a clue.
“Well?” asked Lestrade.
Holmes shrugged his shoulders.
“We have a long way to go yet,” said he. “And
yet—and yet—well, we have some suggestive facts to act upon. The
possession of this trifling bust was worth more, in the eyes of
this strange criminal, than a human life. That is one point. Then
there is the singular fact that he did not break it in the house,
or immediately outside the house, if to break it was his sole
object.”
“He was rattled and bustled by meeting this other
fellow. He hardly knew what he was doing.”
“Well, that’s likely enough. But I wish to call
your attention very particularly to the position of this house, in
the garden of which the bust was destroyed.”
Lestrade looked about him.
“It was an empty house, and so he knew that he
would not be disturbed in the garden.”
“Yes, but there is another empty house farther up
the street which he must have passed before he came to this one.
Why did he not break it there, since it is evident that every yard
that he carried it increased the risk of someone meeting
him?”
“I give it up,” said Lestrade.
Holmes pointed to the street lamp above our
heads.
“He could see what he was doing here, and he could
not there. That was his reason.”
“By Jove! that’s true,” said the detective. “Now
that I come to think of it, Dr. Barnicot’s bust was broken not far
from his red lamp. Well, Mr. Holmes, what are we to do with that
fact?”
“To remember it—to docket it. We may come on
something later which will bear upon it. What steps do you propose
to take now, Lestrade?”
“The most practical way of getting at it, in my
opinion, is to identify the dead man. There should be no difficulty
about that. When we have found who he is and who his associates
are, we should have a good start in learning what he was doing in
Pitt Street last night, and who it was who met him and killed him
on the doorstep of Mr. Horace Harker. Don’t you think so?”
“No doubt; and yet it is not quite the way in which
I should approach the case.”
“What would you do then?”
“Oh, you must not let me influence you in any way.
I suggest that you go on your line and I on mine. We can compare
notes afterwards, and each will supplement the other.”
“Very good,” said Lestrade.
“If you are going back to Pitt Street, you might
see Mr. Horace Harker. Tell him for me that I have quite made up my
mind, and that it is certain that a dangerous homicidal lunatic,
with Napoleonic delusions, was in his house last night. It will be
useful for his article.”
Lestrade stared.
“You don’t seriously believe that?”
Holmes smiled.
“Don’t I? Well, perhaps I don’t. But I am sure that
it will interest Mr. Horace Harker and the subscribers of the
Central Press Syndicate. Now, Watson, I think that we shall find
that we have a long and rather complex day’s work before us. I
should be glad, Lestrade, if you could make it convenient to meet
us at Baker Street at six o‘clock this evening. Until then I should
like to keep this photograph, found in the dead man’s pocket. It is
possible that I may have to ask your company and assistance upon a
small expedition which will have to be undertaken tonight, if my
chain of reasoning should prove to be correct. Until then good-bye
and good luck!”
Sherlock Holmes and I walked together to the High
Street, where we stopped at the shop of Harding Brothers, whence
the bust had been purchased. A young assistant informed us that Mr.
Harding would be absent until afternoon, and that he was himself a
newcomer, who could give us no information. Holmes’s face showed
his disappointment and annoyance.
“Well, well, we can’t expect to have it all our own
way, Watson,” he said, at last. “We must come back in the
afternoon, if Mr. Harding will not be here until then. I am, as you
have no doubt surmised, endeavouring to trace these busts to their
source, in order to find if there is not something peculiar which
may account for their remarkable fate. Let us make for Mr. Morse
Hudson, of the Kennington Road, and see if he can throw any light
upon the problem.”
A drive of an hour brought us to the
picture-dealer’s establishment. He was a small, stout man with a
red face and a peppery manner.
“Yes, sir. On my very counter, sir,” said he. “What
we pay rates and taxes for I don’t know, when any ruffian can come
in and break one’s goods. Yes, sir, it was I who sold Dr. Barnicot
his two statues. Disgraceful, sir! A Nihilist plot—that’s what I
make it. No one but an anarchist would go about breaking statues.
Red republicans—that’s what I call ‘em. Who did I get the statues
from? I don’t see what that has to do with it. Well, if you really
want to know, I got them from Gelder & Co., in Church Street,
Stepney. They are a well-known house in the trade, and have been
this twenty years. How many had I? Three—two and one are three—two
of Dr. Barnicot’s, and one smashed in broad daylight on my own
counter. Do I know that photograph? No, I don’t. Yes, I do, though.
Why, it’s Beppo. He was a kind of Italian piece-work man, who made
himself useful in the shop. He could carve a bit, and gild and
frame, and do odd jobs. The fellow left me last week, and I’ve
heard nothing of him since. No, I don’t know where he came from nor
where he went to. I had nothing against him while he was here. He
was gone two days before the bust was smashed.”
“Well, that’s all we could reasonably expect from
Morse Hudson,” said Holmes, as we emerged from the shop. “We have
this Beppo as a common factor, both in Kennington and in
Kensington, so that is worth a ten-mile drive. Now, Watson, let us
make for Gelder & Co., of Stepney, the source and origin of the
busts. I shall be surprised if we don’t get some help down
there.”
In rapid succession we passed through the fringe of
fashionable London, hotel London, theatrical London, literary
London, commercial London, and, finally, maritime London, till we
came to a riverside city of a hundred thousand souls, where the
tenement houses swelter and reek with the outcasts of Europe. Here,
in a broad thoroughfare, once the abode of wealthy city merchants,
we found the sculpture works for which we searched. Outside was a
considerable yard full of monumental masonry. Inside was a large
room in which fifty workers were carving or moulding. The manager,
a big blond German, received us civilly and gave a clear answer to
all Holmes’s questions. A reference to his books showed that
hundreds of casts had been taken from a marble copy of Devine’s
head of Napoleon, but that the three which had been sent to Morse
Hudson a year or so before had been half of a batch of six, the
other three being sent to Harding Brothers, of Kensington. There
was no reason why those six should be different from any of the
other casts. He could suggest no possible cause why anyone should
wish to destroy them—in fact, he laughed at the idea. Their
wholesale price was six shillings, but the retailer would get
twelve or more. The cast was taken in two moulds from each side of
the face, and then these two profiles of plaster of Paris were
joined together to make the complete bust. The work was usually
done by Italians, in the room we were in. When finished, the busts
were put on a table in the passage to dry, and afterwards stored.
That was all he could tell us.
But the production of the photograph had a
remarkable effect upon the manager. His face flushed with anger,
and his brows knotted over his blue Teutonic eyes.
“Ah, the rascal!” he cried. “Yes, indeed, I know
him very well. This has always been a respectable establishment,
and the only time that we have ever had the police in it was over
this very fellow. It was more than a year ago now. He knifed
another Italian in the street, and then he came to the works with
the police on his heels, and he was taken here. Beppo was his
name—his second name I never knew. Serve me right for engaging a
man with such a face. But he was a good workman—one of the
best.”
“What did he get?”
“The man lived and he got off with a year. I have
no doubt he is out now, but he has not dared to show his nose here.
We have a cousin of his here, and I daresay he could tell you where
he is.”
“No, no,” cried Holmes, “not a word to the
cousin—not a word, I beg of you. The matter is very important, and
the farther I go with it, the more important it seems to grow. When
you referred in your ledger to the sale of those casts I observed
that the date was June 3rd of last year. Could you give me the date
when Beppo was arrested?”
“I could tell you roughly by the pay-list,” the
manager answered. “Yes,” he continued, after some turning over of
pages, “he was paid last on May 20th.”
“Thank you,” said Holmes. “I don’t think that I
need intrude upon your time and patience any more.” With a last
word of caution that he should say nothing as to our researches, we
turned our faces westward once more.
The afternoon was far advanced before we were able
to snatch a hasty luncheon at a restaurant. A news-bill at the
entrance announced “Kensington Outrage. Murder by a Madman,” and
the contents of the paper showed that Mr. Horace Harker had got his
account into print after all. Two columns were occupied with a
highly sensational and flowery rendering of the whole incident.
Holmes propped it against the cruet-stand and read it while he ate.
Once or twice he chuckled.
“This is all right, Watson,” said he. “Listen to
this:
“It is satisfactory to know that there can be no
difference of opinion upon this case, since Mr. Lestrade, one of
the most experienced members of the official force, and Mr.
Sherlock Holmes, the well-known consulting expert, have each come
to the conclusion that the grotesque series of incidents, which
have ended in so tragic a fashion, arise from lunacy rather than
from deliberate crime. No explanation save mental aberration can
cover the facts.
The Press, Watson, is a most valuable institution,
if you only know how to use it. And now, if you have quite
finished, we will hark back to Kensington and see what the manager
of Harding Brothers has to say on the matter.“
The founder of that great emporium proved to be a
brisk, crisp little person, very dapper and quick, with a clear
head and a ready tongue.
“Yes, sir, I have already read the account in the
evening papers. Mr. Horace Harker is a customer of ours. We
supplied him with the bust some months ago. We ordered three busts
of that sort from Gelder & Co., of Stepney. They are all sold
now. To whom? Oh, I daresay by consulting our sales book we could
very easily tell you. Yes, we have the entries here. One to Mr.
Harker you see, and one to Mr. Josiah Brown, of Laburnum Lodge,
Laburnum Vale, Chiswick, and one to Mr. Sandeford, of Lower Grove
Road, Reading. No, I have never seen this face which you show me in
the photograph. You would hardly forget it, would you, sir, for
I’ve seldom seen an uglier. Have we any Italians on the staff? Yes,
sir, we have several among our workpeople and cleaners. I daresay
they might get a peep at that sales book if they wanted to. There
is no particular reason for keeping a watch upon that book. Well,
well, it’s a very strange business, and I hope that you will let me
know if anything comes of your inquiries.”
Holmes had taken several notes during Mr. Harding’s
evidence, and I could see that he was thoroughly satisfied by the
turn which affairs were taking. He made no remark, however, save
that, unless we hurried, we should be late for our appointment with
Lestrade. Sure enough, when we reached Baker Street the detective
was already there, and we found him pacing up and down in a fever
of impatience. His look of importance showed that his day’s work
had not been in vain.
“Well?” he asked. “What luck, Mr. Holmes?”
“We have had a very busy day, and not entirely a
wasted one,” my friend explained. “We have seen both the retailers
and also the wholesale manufacturers. I can trace each of the busts
now from the beginning.”
“The busts!” cried Lestrade. “Well, well, you have
your own methods, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, and it is not for me to say
a word against them, but I think I have done a better day’s work
than you. I have identified the dead man.”
“You don’t say so?”
“And found a cause for the crime.”
“Splendid!”
“We have an inspector who makes a specialty of
Saffron Hill and the Italian Quarter. Well, this dead man had some
Catholic emblem round his neck, and that, along with his colour,
made me think he was from the South. Inspector Hill knew him the
moment he caught sight of him. His name is Pietro Venucci, from
Naples, and he is one of the greatest cut-throats in London. He is
connected with the Mafia, which, as you know, is a secret political
society, enforcing its decrees by murder. Now, you see how the
affair begins to clear up. The other fellow is probably an Italian
also, and a member of the Mafia. He has broken the rules in some
fashion. Pietro is set upon his track. Probably the photograph we
found in his pocket is the man himself, so that he may not knife
the wrong person. He dogs the fellow, he sees him enter a house, he
waits outside for him, and in the scuffle he receives his own
death-wound. How is that, Mr. Sherlock Holmes?”
Holmes clapped his hands approvingly.
“Excellent, Lestrade, excellent!” he cried. “But I
didn’t quite follow your explanation of the destruction of the
busts.”
“The busts! You never can get those busts out of
your head. After all, that is nothing; petty larceny, six months at
the most. It is the murder that we are really investigating, and I
tell you that I am gathering all the threads into my hands.”
“And the next stage?”
“Is a very simple one. I shall go down with Hill to
the Italian Quarter, find the man whose photograph we have got, and
arrest him on the charge of murder. Will you come with us?”
“I think not. I fancy we can attain our end in a
simpler way. I can’t say for certain, because it all depends—well,
it all depends upon a factor which is completely outside our
control. But I have great hopes—in fact, the betting is exactly two
to one—that if you will come with us to-night I shall be able to
help you to lay him by the heels.”
“In the Italian Quarter?”
“No, I fancy Chiswick is an address which is more
likely to find him. If you will come with me to Chiswick to-night,
Lestrade, I’ll promise to go to the Italian Quarter with you
to-morrow, and no harm will be done by the delay. And now I think
that a few hours’ sleep would do us all good, for I do not propose
to leave before eleven o‘clock, and it is unlikely that we shall be
back before morning. You’ll dine with us, Lestrade, and then you
are welcome to the sofa until it is time for us to start. In the
meantime, Watson, I should be glad if you would ring for an express
messenger, for I have a letter to send and it is important that it
should go at once.”
Holmes spent the evening in rummaging among the
files of the old daily papers with which one of our lumber-rooms
was packed. When at last he descended, it was with triumph in his
eyes, but he said nothing to either of us as to the result of his
researches. For my own part, I had followed step by step the
methods by which he had traced the various windings of this complex
case, and, though I could not yet perceive the goal which we would
reach, I understood clearly that Holmes expected this grotesque
criminal to make an attempt upon the two remaining busts, one of
which, I remembered, was at Chiswick. No doubt the object of our
journey was to catch him in the very act, and I could not but
admire the cunning with which my friend had inserted a wrong clue
in the evening paper, so as to give the fellow the idea that he
could continue his scheme with impunity. I was not surprised when
Holmes suggested that I should take my revolver with me. He had
himself picked up the loaded hunting-crop, w which
was his favourite weapon.
A four-wheeler was at the door at eleven, and in it
we drove to a spot at the other side of Hammersmith Bridge. Here
the cabman was directed to wait. A short walk brought us to a
secluded road fringed with pleasant houses, each standing in its
own grounds. In the light of a street lamp we read “Laburnum Villa”
upon the gatepost of one of them. The occupants had evidently
retired to rest, for all was dark save for a fanlight over the hall
door, which shed a single blurred circle on to the garden path. The
wooden fence which separated the grounds from the road threw a
dense black shadow upon the inner side, and here it was that we
crouched.
“I fear that you’ll have a long wait,” Holmes
whispered. “We may thank our stars that it is not raining. I don’t
think we can even venture to smoke to pass the time. However, it’s
a two to one chance that we get something to pay us for our
trouble.”
It proved, however, that our vigil was not to be so
long as Holmes had led us to fear, and it ended in a very sudden
and singular fashion. In an instant, without the least sound to
warn us of his coming, the garden gate swung open, and a lithe,
dark figure, as swift and active as an ape, rushed up the garden
path. We saw it whisk past the light thrown from over the door and
disappear against the black shadow of the house. There was a long
pause, during which we held our breath, and then a very gentle
creaking sound came to our ears. The window was being opened. The
noise ceased, and again there was a long silence. The fellow was
making his way into the house. We saw the sudden flash of a dark
lantern inside the room. What he sought was evidently not there,
for again we saw the flash through another blind, and then through
another.
“Let us get to the open window. We will nab him as
he climbs out,” Lestrade whispered.
But before we could move, the man had emerged
again. As he came out into the glimmering patch of light, we saw
that he carried something white under his arm. He looked stealthily
all round him. The silence of the deserted street reassured him.
Turning his back upon us he laid down his burden, and the next
instant there was the sound of a sharp tap, followed by a clatter
and rattle. The man was so intent upon what he was doing that he
never heard our steps as we stole across the grass plot. With the
bound of a tiger Holmes was on his back, and an instant later
Lestrade and I had him by either wrist, and the handcuffs had been
fastened. As we turned him over I saw a hideous, sallow face, with
writhing, furious features, glaring up at us, and I knew that it
was indeed the man of the photograph whom we had secured.
But it was not our prisoner to whom Holmes was
giving his attention. Squatted on the doorstep, he was engaged in
most carefully examining that which the man had brought from the
house. It was a bust of Napoleon, like the one which we had seen
that morning, and it had been broken into similar fragments.
Carefully Holmes held each separate shard to the light, but in no
way did it differ from any other shattered piece of plaster. He had
just completed his examination when the hall lights flew up, the
door opened, and the owner of the house, a jovial, rotund figure in
shirt and trousers, presented himself.
“Mr. Josiah Brown, I suppose?” said Holmes.
“Yes, sir; and you, no doubt, are Mr. Sherlock
Holmes? I had the note which you sent by the express messenger, and
I did exactly what you told me. We locked every door on the inside
and awaited developments. Well, I’m very glad to see that you have
got the rascal. I hope, gentlemen, that you will come in and have
some refreshment.”
However, Lestrade was anxious to get his man into
safe quarters, so within a few minutes our cab had been summoned
and we were all four upon our way to London. Not a word would our
captive say, but he glared at us from the shadow of his matted
hair, and once, when my hand seemed within his reach, he snapped at
it like a hungry wolf. We stayed long enough at the police-station
to learn that a search of his clothing revealed nothing save a few
shillings and a long sheath knife, the handle of which bore copious
traces of recent blood.
“That’s all right,” said Lestrade, as we parted.
“Hill knows all these gentry, and he will give a name to him.
You’ll find that my theory of the Mafia will work out all right.
But I’m sure I am exceedingly obliged to you, Mr. Holmes, for the
workmanlike way in which you laid hands upon him. I don’t quite
understand it all yet.”
“I fear it is rather too late an hour for
explanations,” said Holmes. “Besides, there are one or two details
which are not finished off, and it is one of those cases which are
worth working out to the very end. If you will come round once more
to my rooms at six o‘clock to-morrow, I think I shall be able to
show you that even now you have not grasped the entire meaning of
this business, which presents some features which make it
absolutely original in the history of crime. If ever I permit you
to chronicle any more of my little problems, Watson, I foresee that
you will enliven your pages by an account of the singular adventure
of the Napoleonic busts.”
When we met again next evening, Lestrade was
furnished with much information concerning our prisoner. His name,
it appeared, was Beppo, second name unknown. He was a well-known
ne‘er-do-well among the Italian colony. He had once been a skilful
sculptor and had earned an honest living, but he had taken to evil
courses and had twice already been in jail—once for a petty theft,
and once, as we had already heard, for stabbing a
fellow-countryman. He could talk English perfectly well. His
reasons for destroying the busts were still unknown, and he refused
to answer any questions upon the subject, but the police had
discovered that these same busts might very well have been made by
his own hands, since he was engaged in this class of work at the
establishment of Gelder & Co. To all this information, much of
which we already knew, Holmes listened with polite attention, but
I, who knew him so well, could clearly see that his thoughts were
elsewhere, and I detected a mixture of mingled uneasiness and
expectation beneath that mask which he was wont to assume. At last
he started in his chair, and his eyes brightened. There had been a
ring at the bell. A minute later we heard steps upon the stairs,
and an elderly red-faced man with grizzled side-whiskers was
ushered in. In his right hand he carried an old-fashioned
carpet-bag, which he placed upon the table.
“Is Mr. Sherlock Holmes here?”
My friend bowed and smiled. “Mr. Sandeford, of
Reading, I suppose?” said he.
“Yes, sir, I fear that I am a little late, but the
trains were awkward. You wrote to me about a bust that is in my
possession.”
“Exactly.”
“I have your letter here. You said, ‘I desire to
possess a copy of Devine’s Napoleon, and am prepared to pay you ten
pounds for the one which is in your possession.’ Is that
right?”
“Certainly.”
“I was very much surprised at your letter, for I
could not imagine how you knew that I owned such a thing.”
“Of course you must have been surprised, but the
explanation is very simple. Mr. Harding, of Harding Brothers, said
that they had sold you their last copy, and he gave me your
address.”
“Oh, that was it, was it? Did he tell you what I
paid for it?”
“No, he did not.”
“Well, I am an honest man, though not a very rich
one. I only gave fifteen shillings for the bust, and I think you
ought to know that before I take ten pounds from you.”
“I am sure the scruple does you honour, Mr.
Sandeford. But I have named that price, so I intend to stick to
it.”
“Well, it is very handsome of you, Mr. Holmes. I
brought the bust up with me, as you asked me to do. Here it is!” He
opened his bag, and at last we saw placed upon our table a complete
specimen of that bust which we had already seen more than once in
fragments.
Holmes took a paper from his pocket and laid a
ten-pound note upon the table.
“You will kindly sign that paper, Mr. Sandeford, in
the presence of these witnesses. It is simply to say that you
transfer every possible right that you ever had in the bust to me.
I am a methodical man, you see, and you never know what turn events
might take afterwards. Thank you, Mr. Sandeford; here is your
money, and I wish you a very good evening.”
When our visitor had disappeared, Sherlock Holmes’s
movements were such as to rivet our attention. He began by taking a
clean white cloth from a drawer and laying it over the table. Then
he placed his newly acquired bust in the centre of the cloth.
Finally, he picked up his hunting-crop and struck Napoleon a sharp
blow on the top of the head. The figure broke into fragments, and
Holmes bent eagerly over the shattered remains. Next instant, with
a loud shout of triumph he held up one splinter, in which a round,
dark object was fixed like a plum in a pudding.
“Gentlemen,” he cried, “let me introduce you to the
famous black pearl of the Borgias.”x
Lestrade and I sat silent for a moment, and then,
with a spontaneous impulse, we both broke out clapping, as at the
well-wrought crisis of a play. A flush of colour sprang to Holmes’s
pale cheeks, and he bowed to us like the master dramatist who
receives the homage of his audience. It was at such moments that
for an instant he ceased to be a reasoning machine, and betrayed
his human love for admiration and applause. The same singularly
proud and reserved nature which turned away with disdain from
popular notoriety was capable of being moved to its depths by
spontaneous wonder and praise from a friend.
“Yes, gentlemen,” said he, “it is the most famous
pearl now existing in the world, and it has been my good fortune,
by a connected chain of inductive reasoning, to trace it from the
Prince of Colonna’s bedroom at the Dacre Hotel, where it was lost,
to the interior of this, the last of the six busts of Napoleon
which were manufactured by Gelder & Co., of Stepney. You will
remember, Lestrade, the sensation caused by the disappearance of
this valuable jewel, and the vain efforts of the London police to
recover it. I was myself consulted upon the case, but I was unable
to throw any light upon it. Suspicion fell upon the maid of the
Princess, who was an Italian, and it was proved that she had a
brother in London, but we failed to trace any connection between
them. The maid’s name was Lucretia Venucci, and there is no doubt
in my mind that this Pietro who was murdered two nights ago was the
brother. I have been looking up the dates in the old files of the
paper, and I find that the disappearance of the pearl was exactly
two days before the arrest of Beppo, for some crime of violence—an
event which took place in the factory of Gelder & Co., at the
very moment when these busts were being made. Now you clearly see
the sequence of events, though you see them, of course, in the
inverse order to the way in which they presented themselves to me.
Beppo had the pearl in his possession. He may have stolen it from
Pietro, he may have been Pietro’s confederate, he may have been the
go-between of Pietro and his sister. It is of no consequence to us
which is the correct solution.
“The main fact is that he had the pearl, and
at that moment, when it was on his person, he was pursued by the
police. He made for the factory in which he worked, and he knew
that he had only a few minutes in which to conceal this enormously
valuable prize, which would otherwise be found on him when he was
searched. Six plaster casts of Napoleon were drying in the passage.
One of them was still soft. In an instant Beppo, a skilful workman,
made a small hole in the wet plaster, dropped in the pearl, and
with a few touches covered over the aperture once more. It was an
admirable hiding-place. No one could possibly find it. But Beppo
was condemned to a year’s imprisonment, and in the meanwhile his
six busts were scattered over London. He could not tell which
contained his treasure. Only by breaking them could he see. Even
shaking would tell him nothing, for as the plaster was wet it was
probable that the pearl would adhere to it—as, in fact, it has
done. Beppo did not despair, and he conducted his search with
considerable ingenuity and perseverance. Through a cousin who works
with Gelder, he found out the retail firms who had bought the
busts. He managed to find employment with Morse Hudson, and in that
way tracked down three of them. The pearl was not there. Then, with
the help of some Italian employé, he succeeded in finding out where
the other three busts had gone. The first was at Harker’s. There he
was dogged by his confederate, who held Beppo responsible for the
loss of the pearl, and he stabbed him in the scuffle which
followed.”
“If he was his confederate, why should he carry his
photograph?” I asked.
“As a means of tracing him, if he wished to inquire
about him from any third person. That was the obvious reason. Well,
after the murder I calculated that Beppo would probably hurry
rather than delay his movements. He would fear that the police
would read his secret, and so he hastened on before they should get
ahead of him. Of course, I could not say that he had not found the
pearl in Harker’s bust. I had not even concluded for certain that
it was the pearl, but it was evident to me that he was looking for
something, since he carried the bust past the other houses in order
to break it in the garden which had a lamp overlooking it. Since
Harker’s bust was one in three, the chances were exactly as I told
you—two to one against the pearl being inside it. There remained
two busts, and it was obvious that he would go for the London one
first. I warned the inmates of the house, so as to avoid a second
tragedy, and we went down, with the happiest results. By that time,
of course, I knew for certain that it was the Borgia pearl that we
were after. The name of the murdered man linked the one event with
the other. There only remained a single bust—the Reading one—and
the pearl must be there. I bought it in your presence from the
owner—and there it lies.”
We sat in silence for a moment.
“Well,” said Lestrade, “I’ve seen you handle a good
many cases, Mr. Holmes, but I don’t know that I ever knew a more
workmanlike one than that. We’re not jealous of you at Scotland
Yard. No, sir, we are very proud of you, and if you come down
to-morrow, there’s not a man, from the oldest inspector to the
youngest constable, who wouldn’t be glad to shake you by the
hand.”
“Thank you!” said Holmes. “Thank you!” and as he
turned away, it seemed to me that he was more nearly moved by the
softer human emotions than I had ever seen him. A moment later he
was the cold and practical thinker once more. “Put the pearl in the
safe, Watson,” said he, “and get out the papers of the
Conk-Singleton forgery case. Good-bye, Lestrade. If any little
problem comes your way, I shall be happy, if I can, to give you a
hint or two as to its solution.”