THE ADVENTURE OF THE VEILED LODGER
When one considers that Mr. Sherlock Holmes
was in active practice for twenty-three years, and that during
seventeen of these I was allowed to cooperate with him and to keep
notes of his doings, it will be clear that I have a mass of
material at my command. The problem has always been not to find but
to choose. There is the long row of year-books which fill a shelf,
and there are the dispatch-cases filled with documents, a perfect
quarry for the student not only of crime but of the social and
official scandals of the late Victorian era. Concerning these
latter, I may say that the writers of agonized letters, who beg
that the honour of their families or the reputation of famous
forebears may not be touched, have nothing to fear. The discretion
and high sense of professional honour which have always
distinguished my friend are still at work in the choice of these
memoirs, and no confidence will be abused. I deprecate, however, in
the strongest way the attempts which have been made lately to get
at and to destroy these papers. The source of these outrages is
known, and if they are repeated I have Mr. Holmes’s authority for
saying that the whole story concerning the politician, the
lighthouse, and the trained cormorant will be given to the public.
There is at least one reader who will understand.
It is not reasonable to suppose that every one of
these cases gave Holmes the opportunity of showing those curious
gifts of instinct and observation which I have endeavoured to set
forth in these memoirs. Sometimes he had with much effort to pick
the fruit, sometimes it fell easily into his lap. But the most
terrible human tragedies were often involved in those cases which
brought him the fewest personal opportunities, and it is one of
these which I now desire to record. In telling it, I have made a
slight change of name and place, but otherwise the facts are as
stated.
One forenoon—it was late in 1896—I received a
hurried note from Holmes asking for my attendance. When I arrived I
found him seated in a smoke-laden atmosphere, with an elderly,
motherly woman of the buxom landlady type in the corresponding
chair in front of him.
“This is Mrs. Merrilow, of South Brixton,” said my
friend with a wave of the hand. “Mrs. Merrilow does not object to
tobacco, Watson, if you wish to indulge your filthy habits. Mrs.
Merrilow has an interesting story to tell which may well lead to
further developments in which your presence may be useful.”
“Anything I can do—”
“You will understand, Mrs. Merrilow, that if I come
to Mrs. Ronder I should prefer to have a witness. You will make her
understand that before we arrive.”
“Lord bless you, Mr. Holmes,” said our visitor,
“she is that anxious to see you that you might bring the whole
parish at your heels!”
“Then we shall come early in the afternoon. Let us
see that we have our facts correct before we start. If we go over
them it will help Dr. Watson to understand the situation. You say
that Mrs. Ronder has been your lodger for seven years and that you
have only once seen her face.”
“And I wish to God I had not!” said Mrs.
Merrilow.
“It was, I understand, terribly mutilated.”
“Well, Mr. Holmes, you would hardly say it was a
face at all. That’s how it looked. Our milkman got a glimpse of her
once peeping out of the upper window, and he dropped his tin and
the milk all over the front garden. That is the kind of face it is.
When I saw her—I happened on her unawares—she covered up quick, and
then she said, ‘Now, Mrs. Merrilow, you know at last why it is that
I never raise my veil.”’
“Do you know anything about her history?”
“Nothing at all.”
“Did she give references when she came?”
“No, sir, but she gave hard cash, and plenty of it.
A quarter’s rent right down on the table in advance and no arguing
about terms. In these times a poor woman like me can’t afford to
turn down a chance like that.”
“Did she give any reason for choosing your
house?”
“Mine stands well back from the road and is more
private than most. Then, again, I only take the one, and I have no
family of my own. I reckon she had tried others and found that mine
suited her best. It’s privacy she is after, and she is ready to pay
for it.”
“You say that she never showed her face from first
to last save on the one accidental occasion. Well, it is a very
remarkable story, most remarkable, and I don’t wonder that you want
it examined.”
“I don‘t, Mr. Holmes. I am quite satisfied so long
as I get my rent. You could not have a quieter lodger, or one who
gives less trouble.”
“Then what has brought matters to a head?”
“Her health, Mr. Holmes. She seems to be wasting
away. And there’s something terrible on her mind. ‘Murder!’ she
cries. ‘Murder!’ And once I heard her: ‘You cruel beast! You
monster!’ she cried. It was in the night, and it fair rang through
the house and sent the shivers through me. So I went to her in the
morning. ‘Mrs. Ronder,’ I says, ‘if you have anything that is
troubling your soul, there’s the clergy,’ I says, ‘and there’s the
police. Between them you should get some help.’ ‘For God’s sake,
not the police!’ says she, ‘and the clergy can’t change what is
past. And yet,’ she says, ‘it would ease my mind if someone knew
the truth before I died.’ ‘Well,’ says I, ‘if you won’t have the
regulars, there is this detective man what we read about’—beggin’
your pardon, Mr. Holmes. And she, she fair jumped at it. ‘That’s
the man,’ says she. ‘I wonder I never thought of it before. Bring
him here, Mrs. Merrilow, and if he won’t come, tell him I am the
wife of Ronder’s wild beast show. Say that, and give him the name
Abbas Parva. Here it is as she wrote it, Abbas Parva. ’That will
bring him if he’s the man I think he is.‘ ”
“And it will, too,” remarked Holmes. “Very good,
Mrs. Merrilow. I should like to have a little chat with Dr. Watson.
That will carry us till lunch-time. About three o‘clock you may
expect to see us at your house in Brixton.”
Our visitor had no sooner waddled out of the
room—no other verb can describe Mrs. Merrilow’s method of
progression—than Sherlock Holmes threw himself with fierce energy
upon the pile of commonplace books in the corner. For a few minutes
there was a constant swish of the leaves, and then with a grunt of
satisfaction he came upon what he sought. So excited was he that he
did not rise, but sat upon the floor like some strange Buddha, with
crossed legs, the huge books all round him, and one open upon his
knees.
“The case worried me at the time, Watson. Here are
my marginal notes to prove it. I confess that I could make nothing
of it. And yet I was convinced that the coroner was wrong. Have you
no recollection of the Abbas Parva tragedy?”
“None, Holmes.”
“And yet you were with me then. But certainly my
own impression was very superficial. For there was nothing to go
by, and none of the parties had engaged my services. Perhaps you
would care to read the papers?”
“Could you not give me the points?”
“That is very easily done. It will probably come
back to your memory as I talk. Ronder, of course, was a household
word. He was the rival of Wombwell, and of Sanger,fi one
of the greatest showmen of his day. There is evidence, however,
that he took to drink, and that both he and his show were on the
down grade at the time of the great tragedy. The caravan had halted
for the night at Abbas Parva, which is a small village in
Berkshire, when this horror occurred. They were on their way to
Wimbledon, travelling by road, and they were simply camping and not
exhibiting, as the place is so small a one that it would not have
paid them to open.
“They had among their exhibits a very fine North
African lion. Sahara King was its name, and it was the habit, both
of Ronder and his wife, to give exhibitions inside its cage. Here,
you see, is a photograph of the performance by which you will
perceive that Ronder was a huge porcine person and that his wife
was a very magnificent woman. It was deposed at the inquest that
there had been some signs that the lion was dangerous, but, as
usual, familiarity begat contempt, and no notice was taken of the
fact.
“It was usual for either Ronder or his wife to feed
the lion at night. Sometimes one went, sometimes both, but they
never allowed anyone else to do it, for they believed that so long
as they were the food-carriers he would regard them as benefactors
and would never molest them. On this particular night, seven years
ago, they both went, and a very terrible happening followed, the
details of which have never been made clear.
“It seems that the whole camp was roused near
midnight by the roars of the animal and the screams of the woman.
The different grooms and employees rushed from their tents,
carrying lanterns, and by their light an awful sight was revealed.
Ronder lay, with the back of his head crushed in and deep
claw-marks across his scalp, some ten yards from the cage, which
was open. Close to the door of the cage lay Mrs. Ronder upon her
back, with the creature squatting and snarling above her. It had
torn her face in such a fashion that it was never thought that she
could live. Several of the circus men, headed by Leonardo, the
strong man, and Griggs, the clown, drove the creature off with
poles, upon which it sprang back into the cage and was at once
locked in. How it had got loose was a mystery. It was conjectured
that the pair intended to enter the cage, but that when the door
was loosed the creature bounded out upon them. There was no other
point of interest in the evidence save that the woman in a delirium
of agony kept screaming, ‘Coward! Coward!’ as she was carried back
to the van in which they lived. It was six months before she was
fit to give evidence, but the inquest was duly held, with the
obvious verdict of death from misadventure.“
“What alternative could be conceived?” said
I.
“You may well say so. And yet there were one or two
points which worried young Edmunds, of the Berkshire Constabulary.
A smart lad that! He was sent later to Allahabad. That was how I
came into the matter, for he dropped in and smoked a pipe or two
over it.”
“A thin, yellow-haired man?”
“Exactly. I was sure you would pick up the trail
presently.”
“But what worried him?”
“Well, we were both worried. It was so deucedly
difficult to reconstruct the affair. Look at it from the lion’s
point of view. He is liberated. What does he do? He takes half a
dozen bounds forward, which brings him to Ronder. Ronder turns to
fly—the claw-marks were on the back of his head—but the lion
strikes him down. Then, instead of bounding on and escaping, he
returns to the woman, who was close to the cage, and he knocks her
over and chews her face up. Then, again, those cries of hers would
seem to imply that her husband had in some way failed her. What
could the poor devil have done to help her? You see the
difficulty?”
“Quite.”
“And then there was another thing. It comes back to
me now as I think it over. There was some evidence that just at the
time the lion roared and the woman screamed, a man began shouting
in terror.”
“This man Ronder, no doubt.”
“Well, if his skull was smashed in you would hardly
expect to hear from him again. There were at least two witnesses
who spoke of the cries of a man being mingled with those of a
woman.”
“I should think the whole camp was crying out by
then. As to the other points, I think I could suggest a
solution.”
“I should be glad to consider it.”
“The two were together, ten yards from the cage,
when the lion got loose. The man turned and was struck down. The
woman conceived the idea of getting into the cage and shutting the
door. It was her only refuge. She made for it, and just as she
reached it the beast bounded after her and knocked her over. She
was angry with her husband for having encouraged the beast’s rage
by turning. If they had faced it they might have cowed it. Hence
her cries of ‘Coward!’ ”
“Brilliant, Watson! Only one flaw in your
diamond.”
“What is the flaw, Holmes?”
“If they were both ten paces from the cage, how
came the beast to get loose?”
“Is it possible that they had some enemy who loosed
it?”
“And why should it attack them savagely when it was
in the habit of playing with them, and doing tricks with them
inside the cage?”
“Possibly the same enemy had done something to
enrage it.”
Holmes looked thoughtful and remained in silence
for some moments.
“Well, Watson, there is this to be said for your
theory. Ronder was a man of many enemies. Edmunds told me that in
his cups he was horrible. A huge bully of a man, he cursed and
slashed at everyone who came in his way. I expect those cries about
a monster, of which our visitor has spoken, were nocturnal
reminiscences of the dear departed. However, our speculations are
futile until we have all the facts. There is a cold partridge on
the sideboard, Watson, and a bottle of Montrachet.fj Let
us renew our energies before we make a fresh call upon them.”
When our hansom deposited us at the house of Mrs.
Merrilow, we found that plump lady blocking up the open door of her
humble but retired abode. It was very clear that her chief
preoccupation was lest she should lose a valuable lodger, and she
implored, us, before showing us up, to say and do nothing which
could lead to so undesirable an end. Then, having reassured her, we
followed her up the straight, badly carpeted staircase and were
shown into the room of the mysterious lodger.
It was a close, musty, ill-ventilated place, as
might be expected, since its inmate seldom left it. From keeping
beasts in a cage, the woman seemed, by some retribution of fate, to
have become herself a beast in a cage. She sat now in a broken
armchair in the shadowy corner of the room. Long years of inaction
had coarsened the lines of her figure, but at some period it must
have been beautiful, and was still full and voluptuous. A thick
dark veil covered her face, but it was cut off close at her upper
lip and disclosed a perfectly shaped mouth and a delicately rounded
chin. I could well conceive that she had indeed been a very
remarkable woman. Her voice, too, was well modulated and
pleasing.
“My name is not unfamiliar to you, Mr. Holmes,”
said she. “I thought that it would bring you.”
“That is so, madam, though I do not know how you
are aware that I was interested in your case.”
“I learned it when I had recovered my health and
was examined by Mr. Edmunds, the county detective. I fear I lied to
him. Perhaps it would have been wiser had I told the truth.“
“It is usually wiser to tell the truth. But why did
you lie to him?”
“Because the fate of someone else depended upon it.
I know that he was a very worthless being, and yet I would not have
his destruction upon my conscience. We had been so close—so
close!”
“But has this impediment been removed?”
“Yes, sir. The person that I allude to is
dead.”
“Then why should you not now tell the police
anything you know?”
“Because there is another person to be considered.
That other person is myself. I could not stand the scandal and
publicity which would come from a police examination. I have not
long to live, but I wish to die undisturbed. And yet I wanted to
find one man of judgment to whom I could tell my terrible story, so
that when I am gone all might be understood.”
“You compliment me, madam. At the same time, I am a
responsible person. I do not promise you that when you have spoken
I may not myself think it my duty to refer the case to the
police.”
“I think not, Mr. Holmes. I know your character and
methods too well, for I have followed your work for some years.
Reading is the only pleasure which fate has left me, and I miss
little which passes in the world. But in any case, I will take my
chance of the use which you may make of my tragedy. It will ease my
mind to tell it.”
“My friend and I would be glad to hear it.”
The woman rose and took from a drawer the
photograph of a man. He was clearly a professional acrobat, a man
of magnificent physique, taken with his huge arms folded across his
swollen chest and a smile breaking from under his heavy
moustache—the self-satisfied smile of the man of many
conquests.
“That is Leonardo,” she said.
“Leonardo, the strong man, who gave
evidence?”
“The same. And this—this is my husband.”
It was a dreadful face—a human pig, or rather a
human wild boar, for it was formidable in its bestiality. One could
imagine that vile mouth champing and foaming in its rage, and one
could conceive those small, vicious eyes darting pure malignancy as
they looked forth upon the world. Ruffian, bully, beast—it was all
written on that heavy-jowled face.
“Those two pictures will help you, gentlemen, to
understand the story. I was a poor circus girl brought up on the
sawdust, and doing springs through the hoop before I was ten. When
I became a woman this man loved me, if such lust as his can be
called love, and in an evil moment I became his wife. From that day
I was in hell, and he the devil who tormented me. There was no one
in the show who did not know of his treatment. He deserted me for
others. He tied me down and lashed me with his riding-whip when I
complained. They all pitied me and they all loathed him, but what
could they do? They feared him, one and all. For he was terrible at
all times, and murderous when he was drunk. Again and again he was
had up for assault, and for cruelty to the beasts, but he had
plenty of money and the fines were nothing to him. The best men all
left us, and the show began to go downhill. It was only Leonardo
and I who kept it up—with little Jimmy Griggs, the clown. Poor
devil, he had not much to be funny about, but he did what he could
to hold things together.
“Then Leonardo came more and more into my life. You
see what he was like. I know now the poor spirit that was hidden in
that splendid body, but compared to my husband he seemed like the
angel Gabriel. He pitied me and helped me, till at last our
intimacy turned to love—deep, deep, passionate love, such love as I
had dreamed of but never hoped to feel. My husband suspected it,
but I think that he was a coward as well as a bully, and that
Leonardo was the one man that he was afraid of. He took revenge in
his own way by torturing me more than ever. One night my cries
brought Leonardo to the door of our van. We were near tragedy that
night, and soon my lover and I understood that it could not be
avoided. My husband was not fit to live. We planned that he should
die.
“Leonardo had a clever, scheming brain. It was he
who planned it. I do not say that to blame him, for I was ready to
go with him every inch of the way. But I should never have had the
wit to think of such a plan. We made a club—Leonardo made it—and in
the leaden head he fastened five long steel nails, the points
outward, with just such a spread as the lion’s paw. This was to
give my husband his death-blow, and yet to leave the evidence that
it was the lion which we would loose who had done the deed.
“It was a pitch-dark night when my husband and I
went down, as was our custom, to feed the beast. We carried with us
the raw meat in a zinc pail. Leonardo was waiting at the corner of
the big van which we should have to pass before we reached the
cage. He was too slow, and we walked past him before he could
strike, but he followed us on tiptoe and I heard the crash as the
club smashed my husband’s skull. My heart leaped with joy at the
sound. I sprang forward, and I undid the catch which held the door
of the great lion’s cage.
“And then the terrible thing happened. You may have
heard how quick these creatures are to scent human blood, and how
it excites them. Some strange instinct had told the creature in one
instant that a human being had been slain. As I slipped the bars it
bounded out and was on me in an instant. Leonardo could have saved
me. If he had rushed forward and struck the beast with his club he
might have cowed it. But the man lost his nerve. I heard him shout
in his terror, and then I saw him turn and fly. At the same instant
the teeth of the lion met in my face. Its hot, filthy breath had
already poisoned me and I was hardly conscious of pain. With the
palms of my hands I tried to push the great steaming, blood-stained
jaws away from me, and I screamed for help. I was conscious that
the camp was stirring, and then dimly I remembered a group of men.
Leonardo, Griggs, and others, dragging me from under the creature’s
paws. That was my last memory, Mr. Holmes, for many a weary month.
When I came to myself and saw myself in the mirror, I cursed that
lion—oh, how I cursed him!—not because he had torn away my beauty
but because he had not torn away my life. I had but one desire, Mr.
Holmes, and I had enough money to gratify it. It was that I should
cover myself so that my poor face should be seen by none, and that
I should dwell where none whom I had ever known should find me.
That was all that was left to me to do—and that is what I have
done. A poor wounded beast that has crawled into its hole to
die—that is the end of Eugenia Ronder.”
We sat in silence for some time after the unhappy
woman had told her story. Then Holmes stretched out his long arm
and patted her hand with such a show of sympathy as I had seldom
known him to exhibit.
“Poor girl!” he said. “Poor girl! The ways of fate
are indeed hard to understand. If there is not some compensation
hereafter, then the world is a cruel jest. But what of this man
Leonardo?”
“I never saw him or heard from him again. Perhaps I
have been wrong to feel so bitterly against him. He might as soon
have loved one of the freaks whom we carried round the county as
the thing which the lion had left. But a woman’s love is not so
easily set aside. He had left me under the beast’s claws, he had
deserted me in my need, and yet I could not bring myself to give
him to the gallows. For myself, I cared nothing what became of me.
What could be more dreadful than my actual life? But I stood
between Leonardo and his fate.”
“And he is dead?”
“He was drowned last month when bathing near
Margate. I saw his death in the paper.”
“And what did he do with this five-clawed club,
which is the most singular and ingenious part of all your
story?”
“I cannot tell, Mr. Holmes. There is a chalk-pit by
the camp, with a deep green pool at the base of it. Perhaps in the
depths of that pool—”
“Well, well, it is of little consequence now. The
case is closed.”
“Yes,” said the woman, “the case is closed.”
We had risen to go, but there was something in the
woman’s voice which arrested Holmes’s attention. He turned swiftly
upon her.
“Your life is not your own,” he said. “Keep your
hands off it.”
“What use is it to anyone?”
“How can you tell? The example of patient suffering
is in itself the most precious of all lessons to an impatient
world.”
The woman’s answer was a terrible one. She raised
her veil and stepped forward into the light.
“I wonder if you would bear it,” she said.
It was horrible. No words can describe the
framework of a face when the face itself is gone. Two living and
beautiful brown eyes looking sadly out from that grisly ruin did
but make the view more awful. Holmes held up his hand in a gesture
of pity and protest, and together we left the room.
Two days later, when I called upon my friend, he
pointed with some pride to a small blue bottle upon his
mantelpiece. I picked it up. There was a red poison label. A
pleasant almondy odour rose when I opened it.
“Prussic acid?” said I.
“Exactly. It came by post. ‘I send you my
temptation. I will follow your advice.’ That was the message. I
think, Watson, we can guess the name of the brave woman who sent
it.”