THE ADVENTURE OF THE GOLDEN PINCE-NEZaa
When I look at the three massive manuscript
volumes which contain our work for the year 1894, I confess that it
is very difficult for me, out of such a wealth of material, to
select the cases which are most interesting in themselves, and at
the same time most conducive to a display of those peculiar powers
for which my friend was famous. As I turn over the pages, I see my
notes upon the repulsive story of the red leech and the terrible
death of Crosby, the banker. Here also I find an account of the
Addleton tragedy, and the singular contents of the ancient British
barrow. The famous Smith-Mortimer succession case comes also within
this period, and so does the tracking and arrest of Huret, the
Boulevard assassin—an exploit which won for Holmes an autograph
letter of thanks from The French President and the Order of the
Legion of Honour. Each of these would furnish a narrative, but on
the whole I am of the opinion that none of them unites so many
singular points of interest as the episode of Yoxley Old Place,
which includes not only the lamentable death of young Willoughby
Smith, but also those subsequent developments which threw so
curious a light upon the causes of the crime.
It was a wild, tempestuous night, towards the close
of November. Holmes and I sat together in silence all the evening,
he engaged with a powerful lens decipering the remains of the
original inscription upon a palimpsest,ab I
deep in a recent treatise upon surgery. Outside the wind howled
down Baker Street, while the rain beat fiercely against the
windows. It was strange there, in the very depths of the town, with
ten miles of man’s handiwork on every side of us, to feel the iron
grip of Nature, and to be conscious that to the huge elemental
forces all London was no more than the molehills that dot the
fields. I walked to the window, and looked out on the deserted
street. The occasional lamps gleamed on the expanse of muddy road
and shining pavement. A single cab was splashing its way from the
Oxford Street end.
“Well, Watson, it’s as well we have not to turn out
to-night,” said Holmes, laying aside his lens and rolling up the
palimpsest. “I’ve done enough for one sitting. It is trying work
for the eyes. So far as I can make out, it is nothing more exciting
than an Abbey’s accounts dating from the second half of the
fifteenth century. Halloa! halloa! halloa! What’s this?”
Amid the droning of the wind there had come the
stamping of a horse’s hoofs, and the long grind of a wheel as it
rasped against the curb. The cab which I had seen had pulled up at
our door.
“What can he want?” I ejaculated, as a man stepped
out of it.
“Want? He wants us. And we, my poor Watson, want
overcoats and cravats and goloshes, and every aid that man ever
invented to fight the weather. Wait a bit, though! There’s the cab
off again! There’s hope yet. He’d have kept it if he had wanted us
to come. Run down, my dear fellow, and open the door, for all
virtuous folk have been long in bed.”
When the light of the hall lamp fell upon our
midnight visitor, I had no difficulty in recognizing him. It was
young Stanley Hopkins, a promising detective, in whose career
Holmes had several times shown a very practical interest.
“Is he in?” he asked, eagerly.
“Come up, my dear sir,” said Holmes’s voice from
above. “I hope you have no designs upon us on such a night as
this.”
The detective mounted the stairs, and our lamp
gleamed upon his shining waterproof. I helped him out of it, while
Holmes knocked a blaze out of the logs in the grate.
“Now, my dear Hopkins, draw up and warm your toes,”
said he. “Here’s a cigar, and the doctor has a prescription
containing hot water and a lemon, which is good medicine on a night
like this. It must be something important which has brought you out
in such a gale.”
“It is indeed, Mr. Holmes. I’ve had a bustling
afternoon, I promise you. Did you see anything of the Yoxley case
in the latest editions?”
“I’ve seen nothing later than the fifteenth century
to-day.”
“Well, it was only a paragraph, and all wrong at
that, so you have not missed anything. I haven’t let the grass grow
under my feet. It’s down in Kent, seven miles from Chatham and
three from the railway line. I was wired for at 3:15, reached
Yoxley Old Place at 5, conducted my investigation, was back at
Charing Cross by the last train, and straight to you by cab.”
“Which means, I suppose, that you are not quite
clear about your case?”
“It means that I can make neither head nor tail of
it. So far as I can see, it is just as tangled a business as ever I
handled, and yet at first it seemed so simple that one couldn’t go
wrong. There’s no motive, Mr. Holmes. That’s what bothers me—I
can’t put my hand on a motive. Here’s a man dead—there’s no denying
that—but, so far as I can see, no reason on earth why anyone should
wish him harm.”
Holmes lit his cigar and leaned back in his
chair.
“Let us hear about it,” said he.
“I’ve got my facts pretty clear,” said Stanley
Hopkins. “All I want now is to know what they all mean. The story,
so far as I can make it out, is like this. Some years ago this
country house, Yoxley Old Place, was taken by an elderly man, who
gave the name of Professor Coram. He was an invalid, keeping his
bed half the time, and the other half hobbling round the house with
a stick or being pushed about the grounds by the gardeneacr in a
Bath chair.* He was well liked by the few neighbours who
called upon him, and he has the reputation down there of being a
very learned man. His household used to consist of an elderly
housekeeper, Mrs. Marker, and of a maid, Susan Tarlton. These have
both been with him since his arrival, and they seem to be women of
excellent character. The professor is writing a learned book, and
he found it necessary, about a year ago, to engage a secretary. The
first two that he tried were not successes, but the third, Mr.
Willoughby Smith, a very young man straight from the university,
seems to have been just what his employer wanted. His work
consisted in writing all the morning to the professor’s dictation,
and he usually spent the evening in hunting up references and
passages which bore upon the next day’s work. This Willoughby Smith
has nothing against him, either as a boy at Uppingham or as a young
man at Cambridge. I have seen his testimonials, and from the first
he was a decent, quiet, hard-working fellow, with no weak spot in
him at all. And yet this is the lad who has met his death this
morning in the professor’s study under circumstances which can
point only to murder.“
The wind howled and screamed at the windows. Holmes
and I drew closer to the fire, while the young inspector slowly and
point by point developed his singular narrative.
“If you were to search all England,” said he, “I
don’t suppose you could find a household more self-contained or
freer from outside influences. Whole weeks would pass, and not one
of them go past the garden gate. The professor was buried in his
work and existed for nothing else. Young Smith knew nobody in the
neighbourhood, and lived very much as his employer did. The two
women had nothing to take them from the house. Mortimer, the
gardener, who wheels the Bath chair, is an army pensioner—an old
Crimean man of excellent character. He does not live in the house,
but in a three-roomed cottage at the other end of the garden. Those
are the only people that you would find within the grounds of
Yoxley Old Place. At the same time, the gate of the garden is a
hundred yards from the main London to Chatham road. It opens with a
latch, and there is nothing to prevent anyone from walking
in.
“Now I will give you the evidence of Susan Tarlton,
who is the only person who can say anything positive about the
matter. It was in the forenoon, between eleven and twelve. She was
engaged at the moment in hanging some curtains in the upstairs
front bedroom. Professor Coram was still in bed, for when the
weather is bad he seldom rises before midday. The housekeeper was
busied with some work in the back of the house. Willoughby Smith
had been in his bedroom, which he uses as a sitting-room, but the
maid heard him at that moment pass along the passage and descend to
the study immediately below her. She did not see him, but she says
that she could not be mistaken in his quick, firm tread. She did
not hear the study door close, but a minute or so later there was a
dreadful cry in the room below. It was a wild, hoarse scream, so
strange and unnatural that it might have come either from a man or
a woman. At the same instant there was a heavy thud, which shook
the old house, and then all was silence. The maid stood petrified
for a moment, and then, recovering her courage, she ran downstairs.
The study door was shut and she opened it. Inside, young Mr.
Willoughby Smith was stretched upon the floor. At first she could
see no injury, but as she tried to raise him she saw that blood was
pouring from the underside of his neck. It was pierced by a very
small but very deep wound, which had divided the carotid artery.
The instrument with which the injury had been inflicted lay upon
the carpet beside him. It was one of those small sealing-wax knives
to be found on old-fashioned writing-tables, with an ivory handle
and a stiff blade. It was part of the fittings of the professor’s
own desk.
“At first the maid thought that young Smith was
already dead, but on pouring some water from the carafe over his
forehead he opened his eyes for an instant. ‘The professor,’ he
murmured—‘it was she.’ The maid is prepared to swear that those
were the exact words. He tried desperately to say something else,
and he held his right hand up in the air. Then he fell back
dead.
“In the meantime the housekeeper had also arrived
upon the scene; but she was just too late to catch the young man’s
dying words. Leaving Susan with the body, she hurried to the
professor’s room. He was sitting up in bed horribly agitated, for
he had heard enough to convince him that something terrible had
occurred. Mrs. Marker is prepared to swear that the professor was
still in his night-clothes, and indeed it was impossible for him to
dress without the help of Mortimer, whose orders were to come at
twelve o‘clock. The professor declares that he heard the distant
cry, but that he knows nothing more. He can give no explanation of
the young man’s last words, ’The professor—it was she,‘ but
imagines that they were the outcome of delirium. He believes that
Willoughby Smith had not an enemy in the world, and can give no
reason for the crime. His first action was to send Mortimer, the
gardener, for the local police. A little later the chief constable
sent for me. Nothing was moved before I got there, and strict
orders were given that no one should walk upon the paths leading to
the house. It was a splendid chance of putting your theories into
practice, Mr. Sherlock Holmes. There was really nothing
wanting.”
“Except Mr. Sherlock Holmes,” said my companion,
with a somewhat bitter smile. “Well, let us hear about it. What
sort of job did you make of it?”
“I must ask you first, Mr. Holmes, to glance at
this rough plan, which will give you a general idea of the position
of the professor’s study and the various points of the case. It
will help you in following my investigation.”
He unfolded the rough chart, which I here
reproduce, and he laid it across Holmes’s knee. I rose and,
standing behind Holmes, studied it over his shoulder.
“It is very rough, of course, and it only deals
with the points which seem to me to be essential. All the rest you
will see later for yourself. Now, first of all, presuming that the
assassin entered the house, how did he or she come in? Undoubtedly
by the garden path and the back door, from which there is direct
access to the study. Any other way would have been exceedingly
complicated. The escape must have also been made along that line,
for of the two other exits from the room one was blocked by Susan
as she ran downstairs and the other leads straight to the
professor’s bedroom. I therefore directed my attention at once to
the garden path, which was saturated with recent rain, and would
certainly show any footmarks.
“My examination showed me that I was dealing with a
cautious and expert criminal. No footmarks were to be found on the
path. There could be no question, however, that someone had passed
along the grass border which lines the path, and that he had done
so in order to avoid leaving a track. I could not find anything in
the nature of a distinct impression, but the grass was trodden
down, and someone had undoubtedly passed. It could only have been
the murderer, since neither the gardener nor anyone else had been
there that morning, and the rain had only begun during the
night.”
“One moment,” said Holmes. “Where does this path
lead to?”
“To the road.”
“How long is it?”
“A hundred yards or so.”
“At the point where the path passes through the
gate, you could surely pick up the tracks?”
“Unfortunately, the path was tiled at that
point.”
“Well, on the road itself?”
“No, it was all trodden into mire.”
“Tut-tut! Well, then, these tracks upon the grass,
were they coming or going?”
“It was impossible to say. There was never any
outline.”
“A large foot or a small?”
“You could not distinguish.”
Holmes gave an ejaculation of impatience.
“It has been pouring rain and blowing a hurricane
ever since,” said he. “It will be harder to read now than that
palimpsest. Well, well, it can’t be helped. What did you do,
Hopkins, after you had made certain that you had made certain of
nothing?”
“I think I made certain of a good deal, Mr. Holmes.
I knew that someone had entered the house cautiously from without.
I next examined the corridor. It is lined with cocoanut matting and
had taken no impression of any kind. This brought me into the study
itself. It is a scantily furnished room. The main article is a
large writing-table with a fixed bureau. This bureau consists of a
double column of drawers, with a central small cupboard between
them. The drawers were open, the cupboard locked. The drawers, it
seems, were always open, and nothing of value was kept in them.
There were some papers of importance in the cupboard, but there
were no signs that this had been tampered with, and the professor
assures me that nothing was missing. It is certain that no robbery
has been committed.
“I come now to the body of the young man. It was
found near the bureau, and just to the left of it, as marked upon
that chart. The stab was on the right side of the neck and from
behind forward, so that it is almost impossible that it could have
been self-inflicted.”
“Unless he fell upon the knife,” said Holmes.
“Exactly. The idea crossed my mind. But we found
the knife some feet away from the body, so that seems impossible.
Then, of course, there are the man’s own dying words. And, finally,
there was this very important piece of evidence which was found
clasped in the dead man’s right hand.”
From his pocket Stanley Hopkins drew a small paper
packet. He unfolded it and disclosed a golden pince-nez, with two
broken ends of black silk cord dangling from the end of it.
“Willoughby Smith had excellent sight,” he added. “There can be no
question that this was snatched from the face or the person of the
assassin.”
Sherlock Holmes took the glasses into his hand, and
examined them with the utmost attention and interest. He held them
on his nose, endeavoured to read through them, went to the window
and stared up the street with them, looked at them most minutely in
the full light of the lamp, and finally, with a chuckle, seated
himself at the table and wrote a few lines upon a sheet of paper,
which he tossed across to Stanley Hopkins.
“That’s the best I can do for you,” said he. “It
may prove to be of some use.”
The astonished detective read the note aloud. It
ran as follows:
“Wanted, a woman of good address, attired like a
lady. She has a remarkably thick nose, with eyes which are set
close upon either side of it. She has a puckered forehead, a
peering expression, and probably rounded shoulders. There are
indications that she has had recourse to an optician at least twice
during the last few months. As her glasses are of remarkable
strength, and as opticians are not very numerous, there should be
no difficulty in tracing her.”
Holmes smiled at the astonishment of Hopkins, which
must have been reflected upon my features.
“Surely my deductions are simplicity itself,” said
he. “It would be difficult to name any articles which afford a
finer field for inference than a pair of glasses, especially so
remarkable a pair as these. That they belong to a woman I infer
from their delicacy, and also, of course, from the last words of
the dying man. As to her being a person of refinement and well
dressed, they are, as you perceive, handsomely mounted in solid
gold, and it is inconceivable that anyone who wore such glasses
could be slatternly in other respects. You will find that the clips
are too wide for your nose, showing that the lady’s nose was very
broad at the base. This sort of nose is usually a short and coarse
one, but there is a sufficient number of exceptions to prevent me
from being dogmatic or from insisting upon this point in my
description. My own face is a narrow one, and yet I find that I
cannot get my eyes into the centre, nor near the centre, of these
glasses. Therefore, the lady’s eyes are set very near to the sides
of the nose. You will perceive, Watson, that the glasses are
concave and of unusual strength. A lady whose vision has been so
extremely contracted all her life is sure to have the physical
characteristics of such vision, which are seen in the forehead, the
eyelids, and the shoulders.”
“Yes,” I said, “I can follow each of your
arguments. I confess, however, that I am unable to understand how
you arrive at the double visit to the optician.”
Holmes took the glasses in his hand.
“You will perceive,” he said, “that the clips are
lined with tiny bands of cork to soften the pressure upon the nose.
One of these is discoloured and worn to some slight extent, but the
other is new. Evidently one has fallen off and been replaced. I
should judge that the older of them has not been there more than a
few months. They exactly correspond, so I gather that the lady went
back to the same establishment for the second.”
“By George, it’s marvellous!” cried Hopkins, in an
ecstasy of admiration. “To think that I had all that evidence in my
hand and never knew it! I had intended, however, to go the round of
the London opticians.”
“Of course you would. Meanwhile, have you anything
more to tell us about the case?”
“Nothing, Mr. Holmes. I think that you know as much
as I do now—probably more. We have had inquiries made as to any
stranger seen on the country roads or at the railway station. We
have heard of none. What beats me is the utter want of all object
in the crime. Not a ghost of a motive can anyone suggest.”
“Ah! there I am not in a position to help you. But
I suppose you want us to come out to-morrow?”
“If it is not asking too much, Mr. Holmes. There’s
a train from Charing Cross to Chatham at six in the morning, and we
should be at Yoxley Old Place between eight and nine.”
“Then we shall take it. Your case has certainly
some features of great interest, and I shall be delighted to look
into it. Well, it’s nearly one, and we had best get a few hours’
sleep. I daresay you can manage all right on the sofa in front of
the fire. I’ll light my spirit lamp, and give you a cup of coffee
before we start.”
The gale had blown itself out next day, but it was
a bitter morning when we started upon our journey. We saw the cold
winter sun rise over the dreary marshes of the Thames and the long,
sullen reaches of the river, which I shall ever associate with our
pursuit of the Andaman Islander in the earlier days of our
career.ad After
a long and weary journey, we alighted at a small station some miles
from Chatham. While a horse was being put into a trap at the local
inn, we snatched a hurried breakfast, and so we were all ready for
business when we at last arrived at Yoxley Old Place. A constable
met us at the garden gate.
“Well, Wilson, any news?”
“No, sir—nothing.”
“No reports of any stranger seen?”
“No, sir. Down at the station they are certain that
no stranger either came or went yesterday.”
“Have you had inquiries made at inns and
lodgings?”
“Yes, sir: there is no one that we cannot account
for.”
“Well, it’s only a reasonable walk to Chatham.
Anyone might stay there or take a train without being observed.
This is the garden path of which I spoke, Mr. Holmes. I’ll pledge
my word there was no mark on it yesterday.”
“On which side were the marks on the grass?”
“This side, sir. This narrow margin of grass
between the path and the flowerbed. I can’t see the traces now, but
they were clear to me then.”
“Yes, yes: someone has passed along,” said Holmes,
stooping over the grass border. “Our lady must have picked her
steps carefully, must she not, since on the one side she would
leave a track on the path, and on the other an even clearer one on
the soft bed?”
“Yes, sir, she must have been a cool hand.”
I saw an intent look pass over Holmes’s face.
“You say that she must have come back this
way?”
“Yes, sir, there is no other.”
“On this strip of grass?”
“Certainly, Mr. Holmes.”
“Hum! It was a very remarkable performance—very
remarkable. Well, I think we have exhausted the path. Let us go
farther. This garden door is usually kept open, I suppose? Then
this visitor had nothing to do but to walk in. The idea of murder
was not in her mind, or she would have provided herself with some
sort of weapon, instead of having to pick this knife off the
writing-table. She advanced along this corridor, leaving no traces
upon the cocoanut matting. Then she found herself in this study.
How long was she there? We have no means of judging.“
“Not more than a few minutes, sir. I forgot to tell
you that Mrs. Marker, the housekeeper, had been in there tidying
not very long before—about a quarter of an hour, she says.”
“Well, that gives us a limit. Our lady enters this
room, and what does she do? She goes over to the writing-table.
What for? Not for anything in the drawers. If there had been
anything worth her taking, it would surely have been locked up. No,
it was for something in that wooden bureau. Halloa! what is that
scratch upon the face of it? Just hold a match, Watson. Why did you
not tell me of this, Hopkins?”
The mark which he was examining began upon the
brasswork on the righthand side of the keyhole, and extended for
about four inches, where it had scratched the varnish from the
surface.
“I noticed it, Mr. Holmes, but you’ll always find
scratches round a keyhole.”
“This is recent, quite recent. See how the brass
shines where it is cut. An old scratch would be the same colour as
the surface. Look at it through my lens. There’s the varnish, too,
like earth on each side of a furrow. Is Mrs. Marker there?”
A sad-faced, elderly woman came into the
room.
“Did you dust this bureau yesterday morning?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Did you notice this scratch?”
“No, sir, I did not.”
“I am sure you did not, for a duster would have
swept away these shreds of varnish. Who has the key of this
bureau?”
“The professor keeps it on his watch-chain.”
“Is it a simple key?”
“No, sir, it is a Chubb’s key.”
“Very good. Mrs. Marker, you can go. Now we are
making a little progress. Our lady enters the room, advances to the
bureau, and either opens it or tries to do so. While she is thus
engaged, young Willoughby Smith enters the room. In her hurry to
withdraw the key, she makes this scratch upon the door. He seizes
her, and she, snatching up the nearest object, which happens to be
this knife, strikes at him in order to make him let go his hold.
The blow is a fatal one. He falls and she escapes, either with or
without the object for which she has come. Is Susan, the maid,
there? Could anyone have got away through that door after the time
that you heard the cry, Susan?”
“No, sir, it is impossible. Before I got down the
stair, I’d have seen anyone in the passage. Besides, the door never
opened, or I would have heard it.”
“That settles this exit. Then no doubt the lady
went out the way she came. I understand that this other passage
leads only to the professor’s room. There is no exit that
way?”
“No, sir.”
“We shall go down it and make the acquaintance of
the professor. Halloa, Hopkins! this is very important, very
important indeed. The professor’s corridor is also lined with
cocoanut matting.”
“Well, sir, what of that?”
“Don’t you see any bearing upon the case? Well,
well. I don’t insist upon it. No doubt I am wrong. And yet it seems
to me to be suggestive. Come with me and introduce me.”
We passed down the passage, which was of the same
length as that which led to the garden. At the end was a short
flight of steps ending in a door. Our guide knocked, and then
ushered us into the professor’s bedroom.
It was a very large chamber, lined with innumerable
volumes, which had overflowed from the shelves and lay in piles in
the corners, or were stacked all round at the base of the cases.
The bed was in the centre of the room, and in it, propped up with
pillows, was the owner of the house. I have seldom seen a more
remarkable-looking person. It was a gaunt, aquiline face which was
turned towards us, with piercing dark eyes, which lurked in deep
hollows under overhung and tufted brows. His hair and beard were
white, save that the latter was curiously stained with yellow
around his mouth. A cigarette glowed amid the tangle of white hair,
and the air of the room was fetid with stale tobacco smoke. As he
held out his hand to Holmes, I perceived that it was also stained
with yellow nicotine.
“A smoker, Mr. Holmes?” said he, speaking in
well-chosen English, with a curious little mincing accent. “Pray
take a cigarette. And you, sir? I can recommend them, for I have
them especially prepared by Ionides, of Alexandria. He sends me a
thousand at a time, and I grieve to say that I have to arrange for
a fresh supply every fortnight. Bad, sir, very bad, but an old man
has few pleasures. Tobacco and my work—that is all that is left to
me.”
Holmes had lit a cigarette and was shooting little
darting glances all over the room.
“Tobacco and my work, but now only tobacco,” the
old man exclaimed. “Alas! what a fatal interruption! Who could have
foreseen such a terrible catastrophe? So estimable a young man! I
assure you that, after a few months’ training, he was an admirable
assistant. What do you think of the matter, Mr. Holmes?”
“I have not yet made up my mind.”
“I shall indeed be indebted to you if you can throw
a light where all is so dark to us. To a poor bookworm and invalid
like myself such a blow is paralyzing. I seem to have lost the
faculty of thought. But you are a man of action—you are a man of
affairs. It is part of the everyday routine of your life. You can
preserve your balance in every emergency. We are fortunate, indeed,
in having you at our side.”
Holmes was pacing up and down one side of the room
whilst the old professor was talking. I observed that he was
smoking with extraordinary rapidity. It was evident that he shared
our host’s liking for the fresh Alexandrian cigarettes.
“Yes, sir, it is a crushing blow,” said the old
man. “That is my magnum opus— the pile of papers on the side
table yonder. It is my analysis of the documents found in the
Coptic monasteries of Syria and Egypt, a work which will cut deep
at the very foundation of revealed religion. With my enfeebled
health I do not know whether I shall ever be able to complete it,
now that my assistant has been taken from me. Dear me! Mr. Holmes,
why, you are even a quicker smoker than I am myself.”
Holmes smiled.
“I am a connoisseur,” said he, taking another
cigarette from the box—his fourth—and lighting it from the stub of
that which he had finished. “I will not trouble you with any
lengthy cross-examination, Professor Coram, since I gather that you
were in bed at the time of the crime, and could know nothing about
it. I would only ask this: What do you imagine that this poor
fellow meant by his last words: ‘The professor—it was she’?”
The professor shook his head.
“Susan is a country girl,” said he, “and you know
the incredible stupidity of that class. I fancy that the poor
fellow murmured some incoherent, delirious words, and that she
twisted them into this meaningless message.”
“I see. You have no explanation yourself of the
tragedy?”
“Possibly an accident, possibly—I only breathe it
among ourselves—a suicide. Young men have their hidden
troubles—some affair of the heart, perhaps, which we have never
known. It is a more probable supposition than murder.”
“But the eyeglasses?”
“Ah! I am only a student—a man of dreams. I cannot
explain the practical things of life. But still, we are aware, my
friend, that love-gages may take strange shapes. By all means take
another cigarette. It is a pleasure to see anyone appreciate them
so. A fan, a glove, glasses—who knows what article may be carried
as a token or treasured when a man puts an end to his life? This
gentleman speaks of footsteps in the grass, but, after all, it is
easy to be mistaken on such a point. As to the knife, it might well
be thrown far from the unfortunate man as he fell. It is possible
that I speak as a child, but to me it seems that Willoughby Smith
has met his fate by his own hand.”
Holmes seemed struck by the theory thus put
forward, and he continued to walk up and down for some time, lost
in thought and consuming cigarette after cigarette.
“Tell me, Professor Coram,” he said, at last, “what
is in that cupboard in the bureau?”
“Nothing that would help a thief. Family papers,
letters from my poor wife, diplomas of universities which have done
me honour. Here is the key. You can look for yourself.”
Holmes picked up the key, and looked at it for an
instant, then he handed it back.
“No, I hardly think that it would help me,” said
he. “I should prefer to go quietly down to your garden, and turn
the whole matter over in my head. There is something to be said for
the theory of suicide which you have put forward. We must apologize
for having intruded upon you, Professor Coram, and I promise that
we won’t disturb you until after lunch. At two o‘clock we will come
again, and report to you anything which may have happened in the
interval.”
Holmes was curiously distrait,ae
and we walked up and down the garden path for some time in
silence.
“Have you a clue?” I asked, at last.
“It depends upon those cigarettes that I smoked,”
said he. “It is possible that I am utterly mistaken. The cigarettes
will show me.”
“My dear Holmes,” I exclaimed, “how on
earth—”
“Well, well, you may see for yourself. If not,
there’s no harm done. Of course, we always have the optician clue
to fall back upon, but I take a short cut when I can get it. Ah,
here is the good Mrs. Marker! Let us enjoy five minutes of
instructive conversation with her.”
I may have remarked before that Holmes had, when he
liked, a peculiarly ingratiating way with women, and that he very
readily established terms of confidence with them. In half the time
which he had named, he had captured the housekeeper’s goodwill and
was chatting with her as if he had known her for years.
“Yes, Mr. Holmes, it is as you say, sir. He does
smoke something terrible. All day and sometimes all night, sir.
I’ve seen that room of a morning—well, sir, you’d have thought it
was a London fog. Poor young Mr. Smith, he was a smoker also, but
not as bad as the professor. His health—well, I don’t know that
it’s better nor worse for the smoking.”
“Ah!” said Holmes, “but it kills the
appetite.”
“Well, I don’t know about that, sir.”
“I suppose the professor eats hardly
anything?”
“Well, he is variable. I’ll say that for
him.”
“I’ll wager he took no breakfast this morning, and
won’t face his lunch after all the cigarettes I saw him
consume.”
“Well, you’re out there, sir, as it happens, for he
ate a remarkable big breakfast this morning. I don’t know when I’ve
known him make a better one, and he’s ordered a good dish of
cutlets for his lunch. I’m surprised myself, for since I came into
that room yesterday and saw young Mr. Smith lying there on the
floor, I couldn’t bear to look at food. Well, it takes all sorts to
make a world, and the professor hasn’t let it take his appetite
away.”
We loitered the morning away in the garden. Stanley
Hopkins had gone down to the village to look into some rumours of a
strange woman who had been seen by some children on the Chatham
Road the previous morning. As to my friend, all his usual energy
seemed to have deserted him. I had never known him handle a case in
such a half-hearted fashion. Even the news brought back by Hopkins
that he had found the children, and that they had undoubtedly seen
a woman exactly corresponding with Holmes’s description, and
wearing either spectacles or eyeglasses, failed to rouse any sign
of keen interest. He was more attentive when Susan, who waited upon
us at lunch, volunteered the information that she believed Mr.
Smith had been out for a walk yesterday morning, and that he had
only returned half an hour before the tragedy occurred. I could not
myself see the bearing of this incident, but I clearly perceived
that Holmes was weaving it into the general scheme which he had
formed in his brain. Suddenly he sprang from his chair and glanced
at his watch. “Two o‘clock, gentlemen,” said he. “We must go up and
have it out with our friend, the professor.”
The old man had just finished his lunch, and
certainly his empty dish bore evidence to the good appetite with
which his housekeeper had credited him. He was, indeed, a weird
figure as he turned his white mane and his glowing eyes towards us.
The eternal cigarette smouldered in his mouth. He had been dressed
and was seated in an armchair by the fire.
“Well, Mr. Holmes, have you solved this mystery
yet?” He shoved the large tin of cigarettes which stood on a table
beside him towards my companion. Holmes stretched out his hand at
the same moment, and between them they tipped the box over the
edge. For a minute or two we were all on our knees retrieving stray
cigarettes from impossible places. When we rose again, I observed
Holmes’s eyes were shining and his cheeks tinged with colour. Only
at a crisis have I seen those battle-signals flying.
“Yes,” said he, “I have solved it.”
Stanley Hopkins and I stared in amazement.
Something like a sneer quivered over the gaunt features of the old
professor.
“Indeed! In the garden?”
“No, here.”
“Here! When?”
“This instant.”
“You are surely joking, Mr. Sherlock Holmes. You
compel me to tell you that this is too serious a matter to be
treated in such a fashion.”
“I have forged and tested every link of my chain,
Professor Coram, and I am sure that it is sound. What your motives
are, or what exact part you play in this strange business, I am not
yet able to say. In a few minutes I shall probably hear it from
your own lips. Meanwhile I will reconstruct what is past for your
benefit, so that you may know the information which I still
require.
“A lady yesterday entered your study. She came with
the intention of possessing herself of certain documents which were
in your bureau. She had a key of her own. I have had an opportunity
of examining yours, and I do not find that slight discolouration
which the scratch made upon the varnish would have produced. You
were not an accessory, therefore, and she came, so far as I can
read the evidence, without your knowledge to rob you.”
The professor blew a cloud from his lips. “This is
most interesting and instructive,” said he. “Have you no more to
add? Surely, having traced this lady so far, you can also say what
has become of her.”
“I will endeavour to do so. In the first place she
was seized by your secretary, and stabbed him in order to escape.
This catastrophe I am inclined to regard as an unhappy accident,
for I am convinced that the lady had no intention of inflicting so
grievous an injury. An assassin does not come unarmed. Horrified by
what she had done, she rushed wildly away from the scene of the
tragedy. Unfortunately for her, she had lost her glasses in the
scuffle, and as she was extremely shortsighted she was really
helpless without them. She ran down a corridor, which she imagined
to be that by which she had come—both were lined with cocoanut
matting—and it was only when it was too late that she understood
that she had taken the wrong passage, and that her retreat was cut
off behind her. What was she to do? She could not go back. She
could not remain where she was. She must go on. She went on. She
mounted a stair, pushed open a door, and found herself in your
room.”
The old man sat with his mouth open, staring wildly
at Holmes. Amazement and fear were stamped upon his expressive
features. Now, with an effort, he shrugged his shoulders and burst
into insincere laughter.
“All very fine, Mr. Holmes,” said he. “But there is
one little flaw in your splendid theory. I was myself in my room,
and I never left it during the day.”
“I am aware of that, Professor Coram.”
“And you mean to say that I could lie upon that bed
and not be aware that a woman had entered my room?”
“I never said so. You were aware of it. You
spoke with her. You recognized her. You aided her to escape.”
Again the professor burst into high-keyed laughter.
He had risen to his feet, and his eyes glowed like embers.
“You are mad!” he cried. “You are talking insanely.
I helped her to escape? Where is she now?”
“She is there,” said Holmes, and he pointed to a
high bookcase in the corner of the room.
I saw the old man throw up his arms, a terrible
convulsion passed over his grim face, and he fell back in his
chair. At the same instant the bookcase at which Holmes pointed
swung round upon a hinge, and a woman rushed out into the room.
“You are right!” she cried, in a strange foreign voice. “You are
right! I am here.”
She was brown with the dust and draped with the
cobwebs which had come from the walls of her hiding-place. Her
face, too, was streaked with grime, and at the best she could never
have been handsome, for she had the exact physical characteristics
which Holmes had divined, with, in addition, a long and obstinate
chin. What with her natural blindness, and what with the change
from dark to light, she stood as one dazed, blinking about her to
see where and who we were. And yet, in spite of all these
disadvantages, there was a certain nobility in the woman’s
bearing—a gallantry in the defiant chin and in the upraised head,
which compelled something of respect and admiration.
Stanley Hopkins had laid his hand upon her arm and
claimed her as his prisoner, but she waved him aside gently, and
yet with an over-mastering dignity which compelled obedience. The
old man lay back in his chair with a twitching face, and stared at
her with brooding eyes.
“Yes, sir, I am your prisoner,” she said. “From
where I stood I could hear everything, and I know that you have
learned the truth. I confess it all. It was I who killed the young
man. But you are right—you who say it was an accident. I did not
even know that it was a knife which I held in my hand, for in my
despair I snatched anything from the table and struck at him to
make him let me go. It is the truth that I tell.”
“Madam,” said Holmes, “I am sure that it is the
truth. I fear that you are far from well.”
She had turned a dreadful colour, the more ghastly
under the dark dust-streaks upon her face. She seated herself on
the side of the bed; then she resumed.
“I have only a little time here,” she said, “but I
would have you to know the whole truth. I am this man’s wife. He is
not an Englishman. He is a Russian. His name I will not
tell.”
For the first time the old man stirred. “God bless
you, Anna!” he cried. “God bless you!”
She cast a look of the deepest disdain in his
direction. “Why should you cling so hard to that wretched life of
yours, Sergius?” said she. “It has done harm to many and good to
none—not even to yourself. However, it is not for me to cause the
frail thread to be snapped before God’s time. I have enough already
upon my soul since I crossed the threshold of this cursed house.
But I must speak or I shall be too late.
“I have said, gentlemen, that I am this man’s wife.
He was fifty and I a foolish girl of twenty when we married. It was
in a city of Russia, a university—I will not name the place.”
“God bless you, Anna!” murmured the old man
again.
“We were reformers—revolutionists—Nihilists, you
understand. He and I and many more. Then there came a time of
trouble,af a
police officer was killed, many were arrested, evidence was wanted,
and in order to save his own life and to earn a great reward, my
husband betrayed his own wife and his companions. Yes, we were all
arrested upon his confession. Some of us found our way to the
gallows, and some to Siberia. I was among these last, but my term
was not for life. My husband came to England with his ill-gotten
gains and has lived in quiet ever since, knowing well that if the
Brotherhood knew where he was not a week would pass before justice
would be done.“
The old man reached out a trembling hand and helped
himself to a cigarette. “I am in your hands, Anna,” said he. “You
were always good to me.”
“I have not yet told you the height of his
villainy,” said she. “Among our comrades of the Order, there was
one who was the friend of my heart. He was noble, unselfish,
loving—all that my husband was not. He hated violence. We were all
guilty—if that is guilt—but he was not. He wrote forever dissuading
us from such a course. These letters would have saved him. So would
my diary, in which, from day to day, I had entered both my feelings
towards him and the view which each of us had taken. My husband
found and kept both diary and letters. He hid them, and he tried
hard to swear away the young man’s life. In this he failed, but
Alexis was sent a convict to Siberia, where now, at this moment, he
works in a salt mine. Think of that, you villain, you villain!—now,
now, at this very moment, Alexis, a man whose name you are not
worthy to speak, works and lives like a slave, and yet I have your
life in my hands, and I let you go.”
“You were always a noble woman, Anna,” said the old
man, puffing at his cigarette.
She had risen, but she fell back again with a
little cry of pain.
“I must finish,” she said. “When my term was over I
set myself to get the diary and letters which, if sent to the
Russian government, would procure my friend’s release. I knew that
my husband had come to England. After months of searching I
discovered where he was. I knew that he still had the diary, for
when I was in Siberia I had a letter from him once, reproaching me
and quoting some passages from its pages. Yet I was sure that, with
his revengeful nature, he would never give it to me of his own
free-will. I must get it for myself. With this object I engaged an
agent from a private detective firm, who entered my husband’s house
as a secretary—it was your second secretary, Sergius, the one who
left you so hurriedly. He found that papers were kept in the
cupboard, and he got an impression of the key. He would not go
farther. He furnished me with a plan of the house, and he told me
that in the forenoon the study was always empty, as the secretary
was employed up here. So at last I took my courage in both hands,
and I came down to get the papers for myself. I succeeded; but at
what a cost!
“I had just taken the papers and was locking the
cupboard, when the young man seized me. I had seen him already that
morning. He had met me on the road, and I had asked him to tell me
where Professor Coram lived, not knowing that he was in his
employ.”
“Exactly! Exactly!” said Holmes. “The secretary
came back, and told his employer of the woman he had met. Then, in
his last breath, he tried to send a message that it was she—the she
whom he had just discussed with him.”
“You must let me speak,” said the woman, in an
imperative voice, and her face contracted as if in pain. “When he
had fallen I rushed from the room, chose the wrong door, and found
myself in my husband’s room. He spoke of giving me up. I showed him
that if he did so, his life was in my hands. If he gave me to the
law, I could give him to the Brotherhood. It was not that I wished
to live for my own sake, but it was that I desired to accomplish my
purpose. He knew that I would do what I said—that his own fate was
involved in mine. For that reason, and for no other, he shielded
me. He thrust me into that dark hiding-place—a relic of old days,
known only to himself. He took his meals in his own room, and so
was able to give me part of his food. It was agreed that when the
police left the house I should slip away by night and come back no
more. But in some way you have read our plans.” She tore from the
bosom of her dress a small packet. “These are my last words,” said
she; “here is the packet which will save Alexis. I confide it to
your honour and to your love of justice. Take it! You will deliver
it at the Russian Embassy. Now, I have done my duty, and—”
“Stop her!” cried Holmes. He had bounded across the
room and had wrenched a small phial from her hand.
“Too late!” she said, sinking back on the bed. “Too
late! I took the poison before I left my hiding-place. My head
swims! I am going! I charge you, sir, to remember the
packet.”
“A simple case, and yet, in some ways, an
instructive one,” Holmes remarked, as we travelled back to town.
“it hinged from the outset upon the pince-nez. But for the
fortunate chance of the dying man having seized these, I am not
sure that we could ever have reached our solution. It was clear to
me, from the strength of the glasses, that the wearer must have
been very blind and helpless when deprived of them. When you asked
me to believe that she walked along a narrow strip of grass without
once making a false step, I remarked, as you may remember, that it
was a noteworthy performance. In my mind I set it down as an
impossible performance, save in the unlikely case that she had a
second pair of glasses. I was forced, therefore, to consider
seriously the hypothesis that she had remained within the house. On
perceiving the similarity of the two corridors, it became clear
that she might very easily have made such a mistake, and, in that
case, it was evident that she must have entered the professor’s
room. I was keenly on the alert, therefore, for whatever would bear
out this supposition, and I examined the room narrowly for anything
in the shape of a hiding-place. The carpet seemed continuous and
firmly nailed, so I dismissed the idea of a trap-door. There might
well be a recess behind the books. As you are aware, such devices
are common in old libraries. I observed that books were piled on
the floor at all other points, but that one bookcase was left
clear. This, then, might be the door. I could see no marks to guide
me, but the carpet was of a dun colour, which lends itself very
well to examination. I therefore smoked a great number of those
excellent cigarettes, and I dropped the ash all over the space in
front of the suspected bookcase. It was a simple trick, but
exceedingly effective. I then went downstairs, and I ascertained,
in your presence, Watson, without your perceiving the drift of my
remarks, that Professor Coram’s consumption of food had
increased—as one would expect when he is supplying a second person.
We then ascended to the room again, when, by upsetting the
cigarette-box, I obtained a very excellent view of the floor, and
was able to see quite clearly, from the traces upon the cigarette
ash, that the prisoner had in our absence come out from her
retreat. Well, Hopkins, here we are at Charing Cross, and I
congratulate you on having brought your case to a successful
conclusion. You are going to headquarters, no doubt. I think,
Watson, you and I will drive together to the Russian
Embassy.”